56000

and I'm pretty sure wire-rate is the rate you can push data across the
wire, so yes. when people say wire-speed, they mean without latency
usually.

andy

On Wed, 13 Dec 2000, Pierre-Alex wrote:

> So if your bandwidth if 56Kb/s what will be your clock rate.
> 
> Do you need to have them exactly set equal (bandwidth and clock rate)
> 
> I still need a definition of wire rate. Is it the same thing as bandwidth?
> 
> Thanks
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
> Andy Walden
> Sent: Wednesday, December 13, 2000 10:43 AM
> To: Pierre-Alex
> Cc: Cisco
> Subject: Re: Clock Rate Wire Rate Bandwidth
> 
> 
> >
> > 0. How do you choose the clock rate on an serial interface?
> 
> clock rate 64000 for instance. the clock rate is only configured on the
> dce.
> 
> > 1. What is the relationship (if any) between the wire rate and the clock
> > rate?
> 
> the clock rate is the number of bits that can be transmitted in a
> second. this equals your bandwidth.
> 
> > 2. What is the relationship if any between the clock rate and the
> bandwidth?
> 
> same as above.
> 
> > 3. How could clock rate speed be "gentle on cables"? (See archive bellow)
> 
> I have no idea what he means by gentle on the calbes unless he was using
> old cat-3 that was error prone. the running less traffic for debugs makes
> sense as you as a human can only process so much intelligently.
> 
> andy
> 
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