RE: Conflicting answers

2000-08-03 Thread TKager
Flow control is a pretty broad term. Some could argue that this is a transport layer function but in actual practice and implementation the question is right. Bridges do not provide congestive feedback or flow control, but routers certainly can. Here is just some food for thought: The data l

RE: Conflicting answers

2000-08-02 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz
>the transport layer provides flow control. There routinely is flow control at transport (e.g., TCP) and in data link protools (e.g., LAP-B). Cisco also tends to call source quench (the use of which is deprecated) and buffering "flow control," but these mechanisms are not true flow control.

RE: Conflicting answers

2000-08-02 Thread Jean Stockton
the transport layer provides flow control. mjs, ccna > -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of > Bob Edmonds > Sent: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 12:20 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Conflicting answers > > > > > I have an html file with s