GarrettCom P80F Manual Do Utilizador

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Magnum P80F & P80C Personal Switches                      Installation and User Guide (07/03)
 
 
 
 
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2.5 
Frame Buffering and Latency 
 
The Magnum P80 & P80F are store-and-forward switches.  Each frame (or packet) is 
loaded into the Switch’s memory and inspected before forwarding can occur.  This technique 
ensures that all forwarded frames are of a valid length and have the correct CRC, i.e., are good 
packets.  This eliminates the propagation of bad packets, enabling all of the available bandwidth 
to be used for valid information.  
 
While other switching technologies such as "cut-through" or "express" impose 
minimal frame latency, they will also permit bad frames to propagate out to the Ethernet 
segments connected.  The "cut-through" technique permits collision fragment frames, which are 
a result of late collisions, to be forwarded to add to the network traffic.  Since there is no way to 
filter frames with a bad CRC (the entire frame must be present in order for CRC to be 
calculated), the result of indiscriminate cut-through forwarding is greater traffic congestion, 
especially at peak activity.  Since collisions and bad packets are more likely when traffic is 
heavy, the result of store-and-forward operation is that more bandwidth is available for good 
packets when the traffic load is greatest.  
To minimize the possibility of dropping frames on congested ports, each Magnum P80 
& P80F Personal Switches dynamically allocates buffer space from an 1MB memory pool, 
ensuring that heavily used ports receive very large buffer space for packet storage.  (Many other 
switches have their packet buffer storage space divided evenly across all ports, resulting in a 
small, fixed number of packets to be stored per port.  When the port buffer fills up, dropped 
packets result.) This dynamic buffer allocation provides the capability for the maximum 
resources of the Magnum P80 unit to be applied to all traffic loads, even when the traffic activity 
is unbalanced across the ports.  Since the traffic on an operating network is constantly varying in 
packet density per port and in aggregate density, the Magnum P80 & P80F Personal Switches 
are constantly adapting internally to provide maximum network performance with the least 
dropped packets. 
When the Switch detects that its free buffer queue space is low, the Switch sends 
industry standard (full-duplex only) PAUSE packets out to the devices sending packets to cause 
“flow control”. This tells the sending devices to temporarily stop sending traffic, which allows a 
traffic catch-up to occur without dropping packets.  Then, normal packet buffering and