Hey Mustafa,

With extended ping, the ToS byte is specified in hexadecimal notation.
 So, you need to take the 8 bits you have for ToS and enter it in hex.
 So, let me ask you a few questions so we can work this through
together.

1) If you have a packet marked as IPP of 5 what does the ToS byte of
your IP header look like in binary?
2) What is the above number in hexadecimal?

HTH



On Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 12:33 PM, Mustafa Yadav <[email protected]> wrote:
> how can we calculate ip priority 5 or dscp 46 value when we are performing
> extended ping?
>
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