mps are in order.
Prolly something to do with the Server/Moderator :)
Have a great weekend.
Mark
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Priscilla Oppenheimer
Sent: Friday, April 26, 2002 12:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: IP RTP Priority
Mbps (Ethernet), to 40Mbps (ATM) to 100Mbps (FastEthernet) and it still
> >insists on limiting the 'bandwidth' parameter to 0-2000Kbps..And
> >you're correct, I also thought using IP RTP Priority was a 'one-liner'
that
> >you let you avoid fa
the 'bandwidth' parameter to 0-2000Kbps...... And
>you're correct, I also thought using IP RTP Priority was a 'one-liner' that
>you let you avoid fancy queueing, but apparently only if you don't need more
>than 2Mbps on a given physical interface... geez...
>
>M
Yeah and I've tried the command on interface with bandwidth ranging from
10Mbps (Ethernet), to 40Mbps (ATM) to 100Mbps (FastEthernet) and it still
insists on limiting the 'bandwidth' parameter to 0-2000Kbps..And
you're correct, I also thought using IP RTP Prior
I was under the same impression that "IP RTP PRIORITY" was a "one-liner"
which got you out from under having to do alot of fancy Queing if all you
needed was the ability to prioritize voice or video. Can you change the
bandwidth with the "bandwidth" configuration co
I'm wanting to use the IP RTP Priority command but I'm running into a couple
of situations that aren't covered by any documentation I can find and wanted
to see if anyone else knew or had used this and could offer some suggestions:
BTW, I'm doing this on a 4700M+ with IOS 12.
I think I understand the ip rtp priority command.
ip rtp priority (rtp port start #) (range) (max bandwidth in kb)
If you have 4 voice channels, each requiring 24k of bandwidth, you should
enter:
ip rtp priority 16384 16383 100
I may have the port numbers wrong, but up to 100k of voice
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