09-04-2008 01:23 AM - edited 03-03-2019 11:24 PM
Hi all,
Not a difficult question if you know - but i don't so i thought that i'd ask :)
When calculating frame-relay TC what is the formula? I'm getting conflicting information. Is it:
tc = bc/CIR
tc = be/CIR
tc = CIR/bc (or be for that matter)
I know that this is probably more of a Qos issue, but hey, most of us run Qos across a WAN anyway :) Your enlightenment would be greatly appreciated. The reason i ask is that i was just watching some old CBT nuggets and he says that CIR is at the top of the mathematical triangle (with tc x bc underneath), but i wasn't sure of where be fits into this equation.
A colleague says that bc should be at the top of the triangle, but surely Jeremy knows best. Just looking for some clarification.
09-04-2008 01:37 AM
Hello ab,
think of tc like the inverse of a sampling rate it is measured in seconds.
in tc seconds up to BC*8 bits are treated as conforming frames.
CIR is a bit rate so it is expressed in Bits/s
Bc is a byte quantity ( byte so must divide by 8 to get bits)
If Bc is small Tc is small too.
So the first formula should be the right one
tc [sec] = Bc/CIR [bits / bits /sec]
Hope to help
Giuseppe
09-04-2008 01:55 AM
That was a clear and concise answer. Have a 5 from me for your efforts.
Thanks Giuseppe.
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