From: vr4drvr . (adrian36@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Jun 06 2000 - 10:00:33 GMT-3
here's the link that i use...
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/cisco/mkt/iworks/wan/dlsw/prodlit/dlsw5_rg.
htm
i guess i'm a little confused over the different methods, in that some
methods take transmission rate in to consideration, when other methods
don't. any ideas? my guess would be to use this calculation from cisco,
then use the bandwidth calculation to make sure that the calculated number
of buffers will in fact be transmitted in the time interval.
tia.
>From: "Earl Aboytes" <earl@linkline.com>
>Reply-To: "Earl Aboytes" <earl@linkline.com>
>To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
>Subject: custom queueing
>Date: Mon, 5 Jun 2000 20:37:25 -0700
>
>Here is a formula that I came up with for custom queueing.
>It requires that you pick one of the queues and assign a byte size to it.
>Since the default queue is usually the largest and is always 1500 bytes,
>I will choose Q3 and assign a size of 1500 bytes
>
>Q1 = 10%
>Q2 = 25%
>Q3 = 40%
>Q4 = 10%
>Q5 = 15%
>
>Now that Q3 is defined I must define my other queues.
>Q? = [(Q?%)/(Q3%)]*Q3size
>Q1= [10/40]*1500=375
>Q2= [25/40]*1500=937.5
>Q3= [40/40]*1500=1500
>Q4= [10/40]*1500=375
>Q5= [15/40]*1500=562.5
>
>Total bytes = 3750
>Another way you could do this is figure out the first one and use that
>value.
>For example
>If Q3 = 1500 bytes then total byte size is Q3 size/Q3% = total or 1500/.40
>=
>3750
>Q1=3750*.1=375
>Q2=3750*.25=937.5
>And so forth.
>Anyone else have any ideas?
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>Earl Aboytes
>Senior Technical Conultant
>GTE Managed Solutions
>805-381-8817
>earl.aboytes@telops.gte.com
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
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