RE: FR CIR ??

From: Scott Morris (swm@emanon.com)
Date: Thu Dec 04 2003 - 09:30:55 GMT-3


As with everything else, it depends on your perspective!

Guaranteed traffic is the bare minimum that you can push through the
circuit, that your provider says will go through because you pay for it.
It's the MinCIR from a purely theorhetical throughput scenario.
Although if you aren't required to pay attention to BECNs and do any
sort of backoff, it becomes your CIR. If you don't trust your service
provider and provide a "just in case" option, then it becomes CIR and
you'll still back off to something lower than that.

If your link capacity is 128K, that is most likely your Access Rate, or
full link speed. This is useful to know for the bandwidth command if
you are doing any queuing stuff. It's also useful for calculating your
be information in FRTS.

Now, of course, there is always the human factor of it depends on who
wrote the lab and what they were thinking. Check your lab diagrams for
any information about clocking speeds of serial lines (hence your AR).
Or, if in doubt of whether the "link capacity" means AR or not, ask the
proctor. They are there to help!

HTH,

 
Scott Morris, CCIE4 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713,
CISSP, JNCIS, et al.
IPExpert CCIE Program Manager
IPExpert Sr. Technical Instructor
swm@emanon.com/smorris@ipexpert.net
http://www.ipexpert.net

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Pun, Alec CL
Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2003 3:52 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: FR CIR ??

If the question mentioned "The FR service provider is guaranteeing
32kbps of traffic", would you intepret as CIR or minCIR ? How about "FR
access being provided by the service provider has a link capacity of
128kbps" ? Sometimes I am confused by the terms which one should be
used.

thanks
alec



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat Jan 03 2004 - 08:25:35 GMT-3