"increase pipe" = port trunking/etherchannel/port bonding whatever your supplier calls it. just use 2 or 4 ports instead of just one. ieee 802.3ad/lacp/link aggregation, etc.... all the same stuff. ;) provided you have another interface on/for your router ofcourse (your switch probably has plenty ;) also an option (for cisco)... int gix/x/x max-reserved-bandwidth 1 (i'd say, 1% of 10ge should about cover all the needs for inband layer-2 related stuff as a few kbit/s already should suffice ;) 1% being the minimum you can set this to. -- Greetings, Sven Olaf Kamphuis, CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG ========================================================================= Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209 D-13359 Registration: HRA 42834 B BERLIN Phone: +31/(0)87-8747479 Germany GSM: +49/(0)152-26410799 RIPE: CBSK1-RIPE e-Mail: sven@cb3rob.net ========================================================================= <penpen> C3P0, der elektrische Westerwelle http://www.facebook.com/cb3rob ========================================================================= Confidential: Please be advised that the information contained in this email message, including all attached documents or files, is privileged and confidential and is intended only for the use of the individual or individuals addressed. Any other use, dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited. On Tue, 7 Feb 2012, Randy McAnally wrote:
On Tue, 7 Feb 2012 08:32:21 -0500, Ann Kwok wrote
Hello
Thank you for your help
But we can't increase the pipe as we are using 10G switch.
The congestion happens when the traffic is using 7G
If you cannot increase bandwidth, then you must increase the TX queue (in QOS and/or port buffer).
~Randy