01-31-2008 10:16 AM - edited 07-03-2021 03:18 PM
Dear all,
I have an issue with a desktop supplier:
The desktop's integral wifi b/g adapter routinely drops about four out a 1000 1000-byte pings from the next-hop gateway through an ap1130 a/g. (for the record, plenty of bandwidth, resources, no problem seen with 3rd party WiFi adapters, usw)
I think this sucks and that he should fix it. He thinks differently.
Can anyone suggest an acceptable threshold for this?
Thanks.
02-06-2008 12:20 PM
Could you please give brief discussion about your topology and features detail.
02-07-2008 02:26 PM
This has a simple sandbox topology:
1130 A/G ap with autonomous IOS trunked at 100/full to a 3550 l3 switchport
I have configured the ap with 3 ssid's, all open authentication, one guest-mode, the other two with 128 bit wep keys.
Each ssid has a corresponding svi/vlan on the switch as a next hop.
The integral adapter drops about 4 in 1000 on the G channel no matter to which ssid it connects.
Please note I don't see any packet drops using other wifi adapters on either A or G frequencies.
Again I'm looking for a rule of thumb. Can you live with losing 4 packets out of a thousand? If yes, how about 1 out of a hundred? If no, how about 4 out of ten thousand?
Thanks,
02-11-2008 02:31 PM
4 packets out of a thousdand seems acceptable to me. That's a failure rate of less than half a percent.
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