This gives me flashbacks to the old GlobalCentre network. Many connections
handed off to colocation customers were half duplex. It was squirrely.
a
-----Original Message-----
From: John Brown
Sent: Wednesday, August 03, 2011 2:41 PM
To: james edwards ; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] half duplex question
The issue you will have is that 10Mb/s Half duplex will only get about 3 to
4 Mb/s worth of traffic. This is because you will start to see collisions
on the line.
Some is void of clue at the provider side. Proper traffic policies should
limit your bandwidth. Not playing dumb duplex games.
I would strongly recommend that full-duplex be enabled on both ends
Cheers,
John Brown
CityLink Fiber Holdings, Inc.
Albuquerque's only Open Access Fiber provider
100Mb/s to the home
GigE to the business
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:cisco-nsp-
[email protected]] On Behalf Of james edwards
Sent: Wednesday, August 03, 2011 10:56 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [c-nsp] half duplex question
I have a metro Ethernet connection with a 5 mbs commit. Normally they
shape the incoming and I shape the outgoing to the commit rate. This time
they want me to go half duplex, 10 mbs. The end result is 5 mbs. Is this
wise
or are there any drawbacks to using half duplex here ?
Thanks,
--
James H. Edwards
Network Systems Administrator
Judicial Information Division
[email protected]
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