Aaron Riemer wrote:
Thanks for all the comments guys you have clarified this for me.
It is a bit dissapointing to know that you cant really manipulate
the types of traffic inbound only outbound. I understand why though.
Just to revive this one while cleaning out my e-mail, another option
Aaron Riemer wrote:
...I am trying to achieve is to police virus updates
from our server so that this traffic can only obtain
128Kbps of the remote sites bandwidth.
Attaching this as an outbound policy-map at the remote site will only
affect traffic outbound from that site. You'll need to
Aaron Riemer wrote:
...I am trying to achieve is to police virus updates
from our server so that this traffic can only obtain
128Kbps of the remote sites bandwidth.
Attaching this as an outbound policy-map at the remote site will only
affect traffic outbound from that site. You'll need to
It is a bit dissapointing to know that you cant really manipulate
the types of traffic inbound only outbound. I understand why though.
I've used inbound policing and shaping on heavily congested links with some
success - it has the effect of applying back-pressure to the incoming
streams -
: Monday, January 05, 2009 7:05 PM
To: 'cisco_nsp'
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] Policing Confusion
It is a bit dissapointing to know that you cant really manipulate
the types of traffic inbound only outbound. I understand why though.
I've used inbound policing and shaping on heavily congested links
: Re: [c-nsp] Policing Confusion
It is a bit dissapointing to know that you cant really manipulate
the types of traffic inbound only outbound. I understand why though.
I've used inbound policing and shaping on heavily congested links with
some
success - it has the effect of applying back
Hi guys,
I am hoping you can help me out with some confusion I am having with
policing. I am testing policing at a remote site with a 512kb WAN
connection. What I am trying to achieve is to police virus updates from
our server so that this traffic can only obtain 128Kbps of the remote
sites