From: kym blair (kymblair@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Jul 28 2002 - 04:55:20 GMT-3
Jason,
"dialer load-threshold" and "dialer idle-timeout" are used to regulate when
the second B channel comes up and drops off. If you set "dialer
load-threshold 5 either", your second B channel will come up when the load
on the first B channel in either direction is 5/255 (i.e., about 2 percent).
This isn't adequate to guarantee that the second B channel will stay
connected.
They are saying that if you want to keep the second B channel active for a
long time, you need to also set idle-timeout high; for example "dialer
idle-timeout 3600 either" to keep the second B channel active for 3600
seconds when there is less than 2 percent load. Any significant load during
that hour would reset the idle-timeout timer and the active period will
continue even longer.
HTH, Kym
>From: li jian hua <jasonli@cisco.com>
>Reply-To: li jian hua <jasonli@cisco.com>
>To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: ask a isdn question
>Date: Sun, 28 Jul 2002 15:18:10 +0800
>
>Use the dialer idle-timeout command to set a very high idle timer when
>multilink PPP is configured and you want a multilink bundle to be connected
>indefinitely. (The dialer-load threshold 1 command no longer keeps a
>multilink bundle of n links connected indefinitely and the dialer-load
>threshold 2 command no longer keeps a multilink bundle of 2 links connected
>indefinitely.)
>
>Above comes from www.cisco.com, what does it mean?
>
>
>rgds
>
>
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