The router will send the entire packet to finish off the byte count.
If it has serviced 4400 bytes from queue 1 it can still transmit 100 bytes
before moving to queue 2. If a 1500 bytes packet is next up in queue 1 it
will transmit the entire packet before going to queue 2.
This means that it will have actually transmitted 5900 bytes even though the
limit was set to 4500.
>
>Here is another study question for clarification. Assume the following
>configuration:
>
>queue-list 1 protocol ip 1
>queue-list 1 protocol ipx 2
>queue-list 1 protocol appletalk 3
>queue-list 1 protocol ip 4 tcp 20
>queue-list 1 default 5
>queue-list 1 queue 1 byte-count 4500
>
>A) Once the byte count in Queue 1 is reached while transmitting a
>packet, the data is sent, then the router immediately goes to Queue 2.
>
>B)Once the byte count in Queue 1 is reached while transmitting a packet,
>the entire packet is sent, then the router immediately goes to Queue 2.
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