I am in the process of designing and developing a next generation network product 
line.  These discussions on packet sizes and other related topics have been of immense 
value to me.  Thanks much and keep it up.

Nara


On Tue, 12 December 2000, Kevin Farley wrote:

> 
> > I am evaluating an IP in IP encapsulation technology and would
> > like to know the average size or size range of an IP Packet,
> > including the 20 byte header.  Can you tell me this or where to
> > find it?
> 
> Big verbose answer follows...
> 
> As others have pointed out, it really depends on what is happening on
> the network as to what an average size would be. I think it is perhaps
> best to think not of the average size, but instead consider the
> distribution.
> 
> You should also consider the network you are collecting on, the time of
> day, loading, etc.
> 
> For example, I collected packet histograms on our corporate network
> which moves LOTS of email and LOTS of web pages as well as local file
> sharing. During the busy times, the distribution is roughly 33% of all
> IP packets are in the 1024 to 1500 byte category, roughly 33% are in
> the less than 100 byte category, and the final 34% appears to be
> uniformly distributed between 100 and 1024 bytes.
> 
> Note that this data was taken on a corporate Ethernet during work
> hours. If you take data on backhaul networks, WANs, or during non-peak
> times, you could obtain quite different results.
> 
> The point is that you need to know what your environment is. If you are
> looking at point-to-point links, the MTUs will be different than for an
> Ethernet LAN. If you are looking at WAN VPNs, then you need to consider
> the application data that will be carried over that link.
> 
> Then there are the differences between protocols: UDP, TCP, RTP/UDP...
> but that is another long discussion.
> 
> Kevin Farley
> 
> 
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