T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1144.1 | the station limit is 500 | NOTAPC::LEVY | | Wed Nov 10 1993 17:57 | 8 |
| 500 is the max; 100 is sometimes cited as a good design target for
performance reasons (but 500 works, and is supported).
Note that concentrators with MACs are considered stations, but from
your topology description, you're nowhere near violating any of the
limits. If the ciscos can't deal with 40+ stations, offer the customer
DECNIS 500/600's. Our brouters aren't limited to 15-station rings.
|
1144.2 | | CSC32::B_GOODWIN | | Wed Nov 10 1993 19:11 | 8 |
| Unless something has changed recently, Cisco is know to be notoriously
bad at brigding fddi. The throughput, from the Bradner reports have
been pretty bad. I havn't seen the latest report, so I don't know if
this has changed. This may be why Cisco wants to lower the number of
stations on the ring. I've worked on rings with alot more stations than
15 and have had no problems.
|
1144.3 | Thanks for the replies | TRKWSH::COMFORT | Here beside the rising tide | Thu Nov 11 1993 09:54 | 20 |
|
Thanks for the input.
re .1
Thanks, I didn't realize that the concentrators had to be counted also.
re .2
Yup, I know that the Cisco Brouters are bad, I mean when we first put
up the ring, the FDDI controllers on the AGS+ brouters were dropping
packets on the input side, when there wasn;t even any traffic on the
ring, outside of routing updates and one DECmcc station :-).
Thanks again,
Dave
|
1144.4 | | 4315::KONING | Paul Koning, B-16504 | Thu Nov 11 1993 11:59 | 8 |
| You might use the difference between 15 and 500 as a way to illustrate how
poor cisco's FDDI implementation is.
Be sure to make it clear that we support the full ANSI standard limit, though
we recommend 100 as a good design practice. (That's very different from saying
we only support 100... we do NOT say that!)
paul
|
1144.5 | | UFP::LARUE | Jeff LaRue: U.S. Network Resource Center | Fri Nov 12 1993 14:34 | 14 |
| Hi Dave,
...when you say that the customer is seeing multiple "ring inits" per
day....can I assume that we are talking about MAC layer or datalink
layer problems?
What is happeing to the DECnet/IP/LAT/etc. that is running over this
network? Are the sessions breaking?
You didn't say anything about the the physical cabling for the
network....are we certain that each fiber run meets the ANSI specs for
distance and loss budget?
-Jeff
|
1144.6 | a little more info | TRKWSH::COMFORT | Here beside the rising tide | Fri Nov 19 1993 09:55 | 30 |
|
Hi Jeff -
The problem would not appear to be with wiring. All the fiber runs
were optically TDR'd when installed. The RFP specs were correct for
FDDI and were adhered to. After getting hold of one of the folks
interfacing with Cisco on the problem, it seems that the ring inits
happen when they are running backups across the ring. Initially, the
problem was really bad, ie. DECnet, LAT, SCS and TCP/IP would all fail
during an "incident" that seemed to correspond will a ring init and
claim frames being dumped on the ring. Cisco found a bug and issued a
patch (there have been over 40 firmware and O/S upgrades/patches over
the course of a year). Now the symptoms have been greatly reduced.
Only LAT and SCS traffic seems to get disrupted now and not all the
time.
To clarify, it appears that Cisco said that it was 15 routers, not 15
stations that they recommend on the ring. They guess that the token is
not making it around the ring and hence a timeout and ring init and
the claim process starts again. One thing they will try is to change
the TTRT parameter. I guess what I don;t understand is that I thought
the controller would have to release the token in a timely manner, so
that it will make around the ring. What they are implying is that a
busy brouter will not release the token and the right time, but I
thought that was in the firmware of the FDDI card, so as to try and
eliminate those problems.
Dave (who is not actively involved in the problem, but interested)
|
1144.7 | | KONING::KONING | Paul Koning, B-16504 | Fri Nov 19 1993 11:21 | 14 |
| Cisco is full of it. The more likely answer is that they made a mistake made
by lots of people: falling behind, getting some soft error (like packet loss,
or queue full) and handling that by reinitializing the adapter. This is a
known bad idea on Ethernet, but fairly harmless there. It's a bad idea on
FDDI as well, but somewhat nastier there because it causes ring reinit.
Not that a ring reinit is all that big a problem... but normally it indicates
transmission problems, and this sort of bug would mask those symptoms.
It is definitely the case that the adapter is responsible for releasing the
token at the correct time. This is done by the MAC chip, and all MAC chips
I know of do this correctly. There's nothing any higher layer function can
do to interfere with this. Cisco is just showing their FDDI ignorance.
paul
|
1144.8 | thanks | TRKWSH::COMFORT | Here beside the rising tide | Fri Nov 19 1993 11:38 | 14 |
|
Thanks Paul,
I appreciate your re-affirmation of the chip set handling the token
negotiations. I guess we should be dropping off more "FDDI Primer"
books at customers. :-)
It is easy to see why the customer is confused by all the smoke and
mirrors.
Thanks,
Dave
|
1144.9 | | KONING::KONING | Paul Koning, B-16504 | Fri Nov 19 1993 17:52 | 5 |
| Seriously... the FDDI primer is a very good book, and it should be given to
as many people as possible. ESPECIALLY it should be given to customers who
are being subjected to ignorant nonsense (or FUD) from other vendors.
paul
|
1144.10 | Part # or location ? | COMICS::WEBSTERC | | Mon Nov 22 1993 09:00 | 5 |
|
Is the FDDI primer available on the net ?
Colin
|