02-25-2022 06:58 AM
2. The distribution layer handles two users simultaneously connecting to YouTube on the same Internet link
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02-25-2022 07:29 AM
Hello,
this is what I would come up with:
--> 1. Two computers directly communicate with each other
Assuming that both devices communicate at the access layer, the effective bandwidth would be 2Gigabit for each user (full duplex)
--> 2. The distribution layer handles two users simultaneously connecting to YouTube on the same Internet link
At the distribution layer, the bandwidth per user would be 1Gigabit (full duplex)
02-25-2022 07:51 AM
Hello,
a full duplex 1G connection renders 2G of bandwidth. At the access layer, both devices would communicate at that 1G (2G full duplex) rate. The link between the access and the distribution switch is 1G (2G full duplex), so when both PCs use the link at the same time, both will share the available bandwidth, so each PC gets 1G.
That is the reasoning...
02-25-2022 07:13 AM
Sorry you looking what bandwidth user required ?
02-25-2022 07:15 AM
yes, i think that is what the question is asking.
02-25-2022 07:17 AM
what device is this ? if you have switch with support netflow you can do, or with NBAR
so we need to know what switch is this, what IOS code running on this ?
02-25-2022 07:34 AM
the question is not really specific so I guess is just switches and end-users
02-25-2022 09:01 AM
10G between core and distributed, and 1Gb connect to access, but you asking YouTube ?
PC to PC you may get around near by 1GB (if the end host located in same switch)
if you looking internet, this is depends on available internet speed also,where the Youtube delivering from.
02-25-2022 07:29 AM
Hello,
this is what I would come up with:
--> 1. Two computers directly communicate with each other
Assuming that both devices communicate at the access layer, the effective bandwidth would be 2Gigabit for each user (full duplex)
--> 2. The distribution layer handles two users simultaneously connecting to YouTube on the same Internet link
At the distribution layer, the bandwidth per user would be 1Gigabit (full duplex)
02-25-2022 07:33 AM
how did you come up with that if you don't mind me asking, what calculation did you perform
02-25-2022 07:51 AM
Hello,
a full duplex 1G connection renders 2G of bandwidth. At the access layer, both devices would communicate at that 1G (2G full duplex) rate. The link between the access and the distribution switch is 1G (2G full duplex), so when both PCs use the link at the same time, both will share the available bandwidth, so each PC gets 1G.
That is the reasoning...
02-25-2022 08:41 AM
i understand now, it makes sense. thanks for the help, i really appreciate it.
02-25-2022 08:21 AM - edited 02-25-2022 08:37 AM
Insufficient information.
For example, with your second question, you don't describe the "Internet link" connection (i.e. its bandwidth capacity is unknown).
For more examples, you don't describe host to access switch connection, nor type of switches and how busy they might be. (For the latter, some switches internal fabric has a bandwidth limitation such that all ports cannot be supported, at full bandwidth, concurrently.)
Last, for example, although unlikely when using switches, many switches support, for Ethernet, half duplex which will impact effective bandwidth between devices.
02-25-2022 08:52 AM
the exam board made the question which is why I was confused too because of the lack of information provided, however, I will try to ask my lecturer to explain the question in more detail. thanks for the help any way I appreciate it.
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