North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: Traffic Shapping
On Fri, 24 Apr 1998 11:24:29 -0500 Jeremy Porter <[email protected]> wrote: FWIW, the Ascend GRF-400 traffic shapes very well. > > Sure we do it all the time. There are CPU limitations on the > amount of total traffic that can be pushed through a router that > is traffic shaping. I'm assuming because all the shaped traffic is > process switched. Also you will probably want to dedicate a router > to it. > > Typically these are only useful near the customer connection, as > you can really only shape outbound packets. (unless you > traffic shape at your boarders, and have a "large" network, you've > already paid for the traffic by the time you discard it.) > > In message <[email protected]>, "Natambu Ob le > ton" writes: > >Has anyone here successfully implement the traffic shaping option on a Cisco > >router? > >-- > >Natambu Obleton - Network Administrator - Frontier Internet Inc. > >970 385 4177 - fax: 970 385 6745 - http://www.frontier.net > >777 Main St. - Suite #201 - Durango - Colorado - 81301 - USA > > > > > > --- > Jeremy Porter, Freeside Communications, Inc. [email protected] > PO BOX 80315 Austin, Tx 78708 | 512-458-9810 > http://www.fc.net -- Neil J. McRae. Alive and Kicking. [email protected] NetBSD-1.3 released! ftp://ftp.uk.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD Free the daemon in your <A HREF="http://www.NetBSD.ORG/">computer!</A>
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