From: Dan Pontrelli (dp595@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Jan 03 2002 - 10:50:23 GMT-3
We connect your ethernet drop to the switch in our POP.
If you want 16-64k we cap you at 64k, then we bill accordingly for any
bandwidth usage over 16k (bandwidth statistics gathered via snmp).
Dan Pontrelli CCIE#8040, MCSE, CNA
NTT/Verio Engineering
... I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
-- Thomas Edison
> You could run CAR on the router, specify each customers IP block in access
> lists, and apply the CAR to their sub-interface. Or if it is worth it to
> you, you could spend some money on an external traffic shaping device. I
> have found Packeteer to make very good devices, and they have some pretty
> cool features such as traffic graphing and ability to do filtering much
> deeper into packets than routers not running NBAR. Hope this helps.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Fred
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Sent: 1/2/2002 7:15 PM
> Subject: Traffic management
>
> This is the question for those folks who work in the ISP field. If you
> have a
> service provider that has an office right in the same building as your
> office,
> they usually give you an ethernet drop right into your office to where
> you
> need it and limit to whatever the bandwidth you need, 1mb - 100mb. My
> issue
> is that I have 20+ customer in the same building and need to provide a
> fix
> bandwidth 16kbps and burst up to 64kbps or more, depend on the
> customer's
> subscription, how will I go about do this? Put 20+ ethernet interface
> in a
> router and setup traffic management on each interface or put a WAN
> switch in
> the building to drop 20+ T1/E1 with FR to all the customers?
>
> BTW, don't laugh, 16kbps may not mean anything to us in US, but it does
> mean a
> lot to those countries that don't have any link to the internet at all.
> =)
>
> Fred
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