On 29.12.2013 01:21, rkwesk_ltsp wrote:
>
> As the switch's port to the client is also 100 Mps I think the client's
> 100mps nic cannot be overloaded
> per se. However, a fellow member of this list, alkisg, has since
> explained to me that the buffer on the
> switch will fill up since it is receiving packets from its giga port
> but can only release them at its
> 100 mbps port. It was this phenomenon (is it called buffer overrun?)
> that I hadn't thought about. This
> then forces the switch to send a pause frame to the server (in order
> for its buffer to be relieved.)

Yes, exactly.
I wouldn't call it buffer overrun - that would imply a programming bug. 
The buffer just gets full.

> Now I will show complete ignorance by asking whether if in fact the
> overload occurs even sooner (or more often)
> if an all giga switch were in place of the above described switch and
> the bottleneck was the 100 mbps nic rather
> than the 100 mbps port on the above switch?

Whether it is a 100Mb port or a gigabit port operating at 100Mb does not 
make a difference.
The bottleneck will be the switch port (not the NIC!) that cannot get 
the data out as fast as the gigabit port gets new data in.


Jakob

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rapidly troubleshoot problems before they affect your business. Most IT 
organizations don't have a clear picture of how application performance 
affects their revenue. With AppDynamics, you get 100% visibility into your 
Java,.NET, & PHP application. Start your 15-day FREE TRIAL of AppDynamics Pro!
http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=84349831&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk
_____________________________________________________________________
Ltsp-discuss mailing list.   To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto:
      https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss
For additional LTSP help,   try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net

Reply via email to