Dear all,

The Lan traffic works on CSMA/CD technique. When it senses that the traffic
can be sent over the wire it goes smoothly. If there is a lot of traffic on
the wire, then it has to wait for sometime, otherwise the packets will be
lost after some specified period. Bcos it does not listen to the data, that
is why it is called as Deffered packets,

Hope this helps
Hitesh
CCNA




[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Nemeth) on 07/26/2000 11:18:50 AM

Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Nemeth)

To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED], "'Erick'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "'Luong,
      David'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:    (bcc: harora)
Subject:  RE: Deferred Packets




On Dec 9,  7:30am, "Ruslan S Tchinyakov" wrote:
}
} Packets are counted to be deferred are due to
} 15 successive collisions to happen after first send attempt-
} the CSMA/CD algorythm version used propose the cut of the back off

     The first two letters here stand for "Carrier Sense".  That means
you have to listen to the wire before transmitting.  If there is traffic
on the wire. then you have to wait.  That is a deferral, it is not a
collision.

} and go to start)- so this implies some not well-uderstood  by many
readers
} Ethernet limitations-
} such as summary number of 1024 nodes in collision domain and so on.

     This has nothing to do with deferrals.

}-- End of excerpt from "Ruslan S Tchinyakov"

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