A subtle correction... A router where all MTUs are the same will never have to fragement anything. A router where all MTUs are >=1500 will probably not need to fragment anything. However, it is possible to attach a host via GIG-E or other media which supports jumbo frames (Frame relay, for example) and need to fragment to support a 1500 octet MTU. Currently, this would be a rare occurrence, but, it is possible in some circumstances. Eventually, if this assumption were to circulate widely, it could have similar consequences to many other errant assumptions on the internet. Owen --On Wednesday, December 3, 2003 11:19 AM -0500 "Steven M. Bellovin" <smb@research.att.com> wrote:
In message <120320031605.8838.1dea@comcast.net>, jgraun@comcast.net writes:
Two questions:
1) I assume MTU path discovery has to been in enabled on each router in the pa th in order for it work correctly?!
No -- it only has to be enabled on routers with smaller outbound MTUs than inbound. A router for which all links have a 1500-byte MTU doesn't need path MTU discovery; it will never need to fragment anything.
--Steve Bellovin, http://www.research.att.com/~smb
-- If it wasn't crypto-signed, it probably didn't come from me.