Thanks Fred. Sawtooth is more familiar. How much of that do you actually see in practice? Cheers, Jakob. On Jun 18, 2013, at 6:27 AM, "Fred Reimer" <freimer@freimer.org> wrote:
It is also called a "sawtooth" or similar terms. Just google "tcp sawtooth" and you will see many references, and images that depict the traffic pattern.
HTH,
Fred Reimer | Secure Network Solutions Architect Presidio | www.presidio.com <http://www.presidio.com/> 3250 W. Commercial Blvd Suite 360, Oakland Park, FL 33309 D: 954.703.1490 | C: 954.298.1697 | F: 407.284.6681 | freimer@presidio.com CCIE 23812, CISSP 107125, HP MASE, TPCSE 2265
On 6/18/13 9:20 AM, "Jakob Heitz" <jakob.heitz@ericsson.com> wrote:
Date: Mon, 17 Jun 2013 22:04:52 -0600 From: Phil Fagan <philfagan@gmail.com> ... you could always thread the crap out of whatever it is your transactioning across the link to make up for TCP's jackknifes...
What is a TCP jackknife?
Cheers. Jakob.