Also... If you look at the queue's on the 3560 ports you will see: incoming (Shared) 2 queue's
outgoing (Shared or Shaped) 4 queue's Sorry. On Jun 22, 2010, at 4:13 PM, Adrian Brayton wrote: > If you are talking shaping on the incoming traffic you cant do that. Shaping > is like a "store and forward" concept but you are going to get the traffic > from them as bursty as they want to send it. > > > On Jun 22, 2010, at 4:06 PM, Joshua Yost wrote: > >> I don't want the traffic soplit up into classes, I just want it to be shaped >> if possible at the 30Mbps the carrier is policing me at. >> >> >> >> >> On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 2:39 PM, Chadwick L. Allison >> <[email protected]> wrote: >> There are a lot of different options when it comes to QoS so you need to >> find out what version/versions you can use on your NW. ie DCSP, CBWFQ etc. >> 4 bit buckets is a good general rule of thumb to use. You can go up to six >> but looking at what you have here I don't see a need for that. >> >> >> From: Joshua Yost >> Sent: Tuesday, June 22, 2010 11:09 AM >> To: [email protected] >> Subject: [OSL | CCIE_RS] QOS >> >> Lets say you have a customer switch (a 3560) with a Metro Ethernet Link on >> one of its ports. The provider polices you to 30 Mbps. I want to shape the >> traffic on my side to avoid the choppiness. >> >> Scenario 1: I don't have any concept of classes of traffic in my network, I >> just want to try so shape to 30Mbps overall. How would you configure this? >> >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please >> visit www.ipexpert.com >> >> _______________________________________________ >> For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please >> visit www.ipexpert.com >
_______________________________________________ For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please visit www.ipexpert.com
