Re: Customer Queue

From: Scott Morris <smorris_at_ine.com>
Date: Thu, 22 Oct 2009 08:03:47 -0400

Your byte count is a scheduling cycle (rotation). It has no relevance
to the bandwidth of an interface. The only difference there would be
HOW MANY rotations through the scheduler you can do within 1 second on a
T1 vs an Ethernet vs a Fast Ethernet, etc.

 

*Scott Morris*, CCIE/x4/ (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713,

JNCIE-M #153, JNCIS-ER, CISSP, et al.

JNCI-M, JNCI-ER

evil_at_ine.com

Internetwork Expert, Inc.

http://www.InternetworkExpert.com

Toll Free: 877-224-8987

Outside US: 775-826-4344

Knowledge is power.

Power corrupts.

Study hard and be Eeeeviiiil......

 

MDevarajan_at_inautix.co.in wrote:
> Team ,
>
> |=====|E0/0
> | R1 |------------
> =====|
> HTTP - 50%
> b" SMTP - 20%
> b" NNTP - 10%
> b" Other - 20%
>
> Assign HTTP traffic to be in queue 1
> b" Assign SMTP traffic to be in queue 2
> b" Assign NNTP traffic to be in queue 3
> b" Assign all other traffic to be in queue 4
> b" Allocate the byte counts for queues 1, 2, 3 and 4 in a ratio of 5:2:1:2
>
>
>
> Ans :
>
> R1(config)#queue-list 1 queue 1 byte-count 5xxx
> R1(config)#queue-list 1 queue 2 byte-count 2xxx
> R1(config)#queue-list 1 queue 3 byte-count 1xxx
> R1(config)#queue-list 1 queue 4 byte-count 2xxx
>
>
> My Question is how to find the byte count ..??? My doubt is E0/0 BW is 10
> Mbs
>
> For Fg : if the interface BW is 1.544 . Wat would be the byte count ???
> as per the above question ?? Please advise me ..
>
>
>
> Thanks in Advance,
> Mohan
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
> Subscription information may be found at:
> http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html

Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
Received on Thu Oct 22 2009 - 08:03:47 ART

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Sun Nov 01 2009 - 07:51:00 ART