On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 08:53:18AM +0000, Nick Hilliard wrote: > On 27/01/2011 07:57, Mohammad Khalil wrote: > >its on Cisco 7606-S , the connection is port channel with 5 physical > >interfaces > > Oh, you Really Don't Want To Do That(tm). For etherchannels on > EARL7 architecture, if you want your load balancing to be roughly > equal, you need to ensure that your port channels are configured > with either 2, 4 or 8 physical interfaces. The reason for this is > due to limitations on the EARL7 chip on the sup720 - specifically, > there are only 3 bits of bucket space, which means 1) no more than 8 > active links and 2) severe limitations in the load balancing > algorithm. > > If you have 5 physical interfaces, the load balancing will work out > (in the optimal case) as 2:2:2:1:1. This means that you effectively > have (2+2+2+1+1)/(2+2+2+2+2) = 4/5 of the total etherchannel > capacity available for traffic. I.e. you're actually not gaining > anything by using more than 4 physical links.
Of course he is. With five links, assuming the traffic hashes evenly across the 8 buckets, he effectvly has 4GBps of throughput available. If one of the five links fails, he still has 4GBps of throughput available. With four links, assuming the traffic hashes evenly across the 8 buckets, he effectively has 4Gbps of throughput available. But if one of the four links fails, then he'll hash at 3:3:2 and effectively have 2.67Gbps available. In other words, the fifth link doesn't add any throughput benefit in the "everything is working" case -- four or five active links offers the same throughput -- but it offers a significant redundancy benefit. With five links, loss of one link is no impact to cpacity; with four, loss of one link is a 33% reduction in capacity. -- Brett _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/