> -----Original Message-----
> From: James Carlson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, February 20, 2006 12:54 PM
> To: Veera Tubati (vtubati)
> Cc: Pekka Savola; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: RE: [Pppext] Re: Last Call: 'Accommodating an MTU/MRU greater
> than1492 in PPPoE' to Informational RFC
> 
> Veera Tubati (vtubati) writes:
> > > We're talking about a single MTU-sized packet transmitted and one
> > > received on an Ethernet link.
> >
> > Correct, but it could be in the order of 20k or more sessions trying
to
> > come up at once after the outage of a BRAS box. For the broken
clients
> > asking for 1500, it is more overhead to timeout and retry something
> > else. Whatever can be avoided reasonably is a bonus.
> 
> So ... we're worried about a BRAS that is unable to handle the load of
> one extra packet for those 20K clients but that will perform
> "acceptably" when those same 20K clients are all actively using their
> links?
> 
> I don't quite understand, but it sounds to me like a design issue for
> the BRAS and not a protocol issue.  If it wants, that machine could
> sequence the link bring-up so that it spreads out the load, or it
> could just use a more capable hardware platform.

It is clear that is not an issue with the protocol, but seems there are
practical reasons which pushed for the birth of this draft.

Veera

> 
> > May be there would be cases where ISP is sure that their underlying
> > network and clients support 1500 MRU indeed...
> 
> I agree that consenting peers may do as they like, but it's not an
> optimization that makes sense to me.
> 
> --
> James Carlson, KISS Network
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sun Microsystems / 1 Network Drive         71.232W   Vox +1 781 442
2084
> MS UBUR02-212 / Burlington MA 01803-2757   42.496N   Fax +1 781 442
1677

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