Thank You Brandon

Regards
Anantha Subramanian Natarajan

On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 10:41 AM, Brandon Carroll <[email protected]>wrote:

> I'd have to revisit this, because it's been some time since I've done
> anything with it, but I recall something from the old QOS class about the
> max-reservable bandwidth is defaulted to 75% of the link bandwidth so that
> routing protocols and other traffic can have a little breathing room.  Like
> I said, I'll have to revisit this, but I think this may be the case.  I
> don't think routing protocol traffic actually uses the "priority" queue on
> Cisco routers, unless you classify the traffic and put it there.
>
> Sorry if I'm off base here, just thinking out loud.
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Brandon Carroll - CCIE #23837
> Senior Technical Instructor - IPexpert
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> On May 14, 2010, at 5:37 PM, Paul Stewart wrote:
>
> > I think this is not just an ASA thing. It seems that routing protocol
> > traffic is always handled by the priority queue on a router as well.
> >
> >
> >
> > On May 14, 2010, at 3:06 AM, Anantha Subramanian Natarajan <
> [email protected]
> >> wrote:
> >
> >> Hi All,
> >>
> >> Was reading through Chapter 11(QOS) on the Cisco ASA:All-in-One
> >> Firewall,IPS,Anti-X, and VPN Adaptive security appliance" book and
> >> inferring
> >> the below sentence from that
> >>
> >> "Certain critical keep-alive packets such as EIGRP hello packets are
> >> never
> >> dropped even if they are not prioritized in the shaped traffic"
> >>
> >> Have a question on that,
> >>
> >> 1) Is all protocols hello packets treated that way in Cisco ASA and
> >> if so,
> >> how Cisco ASA keeps track of that to have this exception.
> >>
> >> Thanks for the help
> >>
> >> Regards
> >> Anantha Subramanian Natarajan
> >>
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