From: Scott Morris (swm@emanon.com)
Date: Fri Feb 03 2006 - 13:54:43 GMT-3
Passive just says that IF something comes in compressed, go ahead and enable
it. In many IOS releases, this didn't work right though. :)
So >IF< you want compression to be used, you have so specify SOMETHING on
both ends. (whether active/active or active/passive)
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of Mark
Lasarko
Sent: Friday, February 03, 2006 10:53 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com; seajay76@nate.com
Subject: Re: Compression on both sides or just one side will do?
Greetings Nick,
Good question with a classic Cisco answer - "it depends".
Two formats, which vary in operation based on the encapsulation.
Also, in regards to the configuration;
You *could* have one side as "passive".
(but that also depends on the encapsulation used) In this way you would not
need to "mirror" the configuration.
http://tinyurl.com/9k4as
HTH,
~M
>>> "Nick" <seajay76@nate.com> 02/03/06 2:45 AM >>>
Hi, all.
In Wendell Odom's QoS Self-Study book 2nd Ed., it says "Both routers on each
end of the serial link need
to enable RTP and TCP header compresion for the exact same TCP and RTP flow"
Then continues to say "if one router tries to compress TCP packets, and the
router does not expect to need to decompress the packets,
then the TCP connection will fail."
My question is whether this rule applies to both the TCP and RTP or just to
the TCP traffic.
Any comments?
Regards,
Nick
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