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Simulate latency delay in a lab setup

amerutoji
Level 1
Level 1

Hello,

I have a few routers in a lab setting connected via crossover serial lines (T1).

I am trying to test some QoS policies and was wondering if there is a way to somehow artificially introduce latency on a direct back-to-back cable serial connection, to make a "circuit" look like a long distance WAN?

I've heard about some specialized hardware that can create different latencies, errors, jitter etc. I don't know if Cisco has anything like that (hardware or IOS)?

Thanks,

Amer.

3 Replies 3

Harold Ritter
Level 12
Level 12

I do not believe that we have a product that does that. There is many different solution available out there though.

Hope this helps,

Harold Ritter
Sr Technical Leader
CCIE 4168 (R&S, SP)
harold@cisco.com
México móvil: +52 1 55 8312 4915
Cisco México
Paseo de la Reforma 222
Piso 19
Cuauhtémoc, Juárez
Ciudad de México, 06600
México

Thanks for a reply.

Do you know of any product like that, that can be used for serial lines in particular?

scottmac
Level 10
Level 10

Check out a product called "The Cloud" by Shunra. It allows you to take a snapshot of network conditions and "playback" traffic through those conditions.

It also allow you to tweak the conditions to throw in things like latency, several kinds of congestion, and errored line conditions.

Check out a Google of "shunra" ... there's some articles and a link to the company.

I was told once or twice that there's a way to tweak a Linux kernel to do latency simulation too, but I don't remember any of the details.

("latency simulator" got a few hits too)

Good Luck

Scott

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