Hi Steve,
I believe technically it would, but there is no other way around it. You need 
to achieve that target rate, and the calculated values are derived of that. 
I believe in my lab excess traffic burst was set to 0 as well, and altered too. 
Nothing you can do about it.

Alef

>       
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
> 
> Hey Experts!
> 
> In Volume 1 Task 23.4 we are asked to configure GTS and shouldn't allow 
> excess traffic bursts
> 
> The way I interpreted this is that we need to configure excess as a "0", does 
> that sound right? For example, if we only configure the target bit rate, the 
> other values will be automagically configured for us by Cisco IOS. Doesn't 
> this violate the task?
> 
> 
> For example the DSG shows the following configuration by just configuring the 
> target bit rate
> 
> R4(config)#inter s0/1/0.24
> R4(config-subif)# bandwidth 64
> R4(config-subif)# traffic-shape group 101 9600
> R4(config-subif)# traffic-shape group 102 32000
> R4(config-subif)# traffic-shape group 103 22400
> 
> However let's look at the interface configuration we can see the numbers were 
> automagically configured which in my eyes vilolates the task
> 
> interface Serial0/1/0.24 point-to-point
> bandwidth 64
> ip address 150.50.24.1 255.255.255.252
> traffic-shape group 101 9600 7968 7968 1000
> traffic-shape group 102 32000 8000 8000 1000
> traffic-shape group 103 22400 7952 7952 1000
> 
> My end config looked like this
> 
> interface Serial0/1/0.24 point-to-point
> bandwidth 64
> ip address 150.50.24.1 255.255.255.252
> traffic-shape group 101 9600 7968 0 1000
> traffic-shape group 102 32000 8000 0 1000
> traffic-shape group 103 22400 7952 0 1000
> 
> If someone can shed some light on this it would be much appreciated!
> 
> 

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