From: Henry D. (henryd31@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Aug 06 2001 - 23:17:06 GMT-3
I'll give it a try.
The byte count is there basically to just make you aware that
these options are available and possibly make you think of the
default values as it might be necessary in some situations to chenge them.
MTU size has little to do with this excersize. You have 1500 MTU but
MTU is not what you want to limit, it's the packet's size. Your packets
can be up to 1500 bytes and not 1500 bytes all the time.
later..
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Ryaboy Vadim
Sent: Monday, August 06, 2001 1:11 PM
To: 'ccielab@groupstudy.com'
Subject: ccbootcamp lab #3. Custom Queuing - byte-count.
Hello,
In ccbootcamp lab #3 instructions ask to provide 25% of traffic to certain
protocols (something like 25% for ip, 25% for telnet, 25% for ipx ,25% for
rest).
The answer given is here:
queue-list 1 protocol ip 0 tcp telnet
queue-list 1 protocol ipx 1
queue-list 1 protocol ip 3
queue-list 1 default 2
queue-list 1 queue 0 byte-count 1000
queue-list 1 queue 1 byte-count 1000
queue-list 1 queue 2 byte-count 1000
queue-list 1 queue 3 byte-count 1000
My question : why do I need to specify byte-count? And also, why byte-count
is 1000? Ethernet default MTU is 1500.
Thank you.
Vadim Ryaboy.
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