From: John Matijevic (matijevi@bellsouth.net)
Date: Fri Jun 27 2003 - 17:21:50 GMT-3
Thanks all,
I got the answer it looks like it is based off of 10000 bytes and with IOS
12.1 you do not need to be specific and can user whatever number you want if
its not given.
Sincerely,
Matijevic
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Matijevic" <matijevi@bellsouth.net>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Friday, June 27, 2003 3:11 PM
Subject: QOS and custom queueing
> Hello Team,
> I have the following scenerio:
> queue-list 1 protocol ip 1 tcp telnet
> queue-list 1 protocol ip 1 tcp ftp
> queue-list 1 protocol ipx 2
> queue-list 1 protocol ip 2 list 101
> queue-list 1 protocol ip 3 gt 1200
> queue-list 1 interface Ethernet0 3
> queue-list 1 default 4
>
> Basically I have 4 queues and the question asks to configure Custom
Queueing
> so that 50% of bandwidth go to que 1, 25% goes to que 2, 15% goest to que
3,
> and 10% goes to que 4.
> The answer is the following:
> queue-list 1 queue 1 byte-count 5000
> queue-list 1 queue 2 byte-count 2500
> queue-list 1 queue 4 byte-count 1000
> My question is how the numbers get derived in the answer? I am thinking
that
> they are using 10000 kilobytes as a reference, i think it may be because
since
> ethernet 0 is in one of the queues that its bandwidth is 10000kb, but I am
not
> a 100% sure, I think that the default you use is 1500 bytes, and since
there
> are 4 queues I thought it would be 6000, since they dont say the byte
count of
> each queue. how do you come up with this? Also I think there should be
> another que in the answer, queue-list 1 queue 3 byte-count 1500, Could
someone
> help me clarify?
> Sincerely,
> Matijevic
>
>
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