priority queing.  Keep in mind priority queing will drown out lower
priority traffic in deferance to the higher priority traffic period, it
doesn't like to share.

  dave

Andy Davidson wrote:
> 
> We have a network with one 2522 and 10 1601 routers set up in a hub and
> spoke arrangement. Our connections are relatively small 56k Frame Relay.
> My question is. Is there a way to give certain applications a higher
> priority to the bandwidth available and have the other apps use what ever
is
> left over.
> 
> Our main application runs a telnet session back to a unix box here at the
> main location. There are usually about 3-4 people at the remote location.
> Whenever anyone sends a large print job, does a large FTP, or is browsing
> the web it makes everyone else's telnet session at the remote site VERY
> SLOW. Since the telnet session is priority #1 for our business, I would
like
> it very much if I could make my routers understand that.
> 
> Any ideas????
> 
> Thanks in advance for your replies!!!
> 
> Andy
-- 
David Madland
Sr. Network Engineer
CCIE# 2016
Qwest Communications Int. Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
612-664-3367

"Emotion should reflect reason not guide it"




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