Linked by JoanneRodgers on Thu 15th May 2008 23:02 UTC
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RE[3]: Powerline and the bus
by Soulbender on Sat 17th May 2008 11:54
in reply to "RE[2]: Powerline and the bus"
But you need to use a little common sense, if there is only one cable between two switches and you run five sessions through that single cable the bandwidth is obviously going to be shared
To fix this add more cables and alternate paths.
To fix this add more cables and alternate paths.
Common sense? Adding more cables and paths? Heh. Hilarious. For the love of God, please tell me you're not doing this for a living.
RE[4]: Powerline and the bus
by Tyr. on Sun 18th May 2008 01:07
in reply to "RE[3]: Powerline and the bus"
Read, understand and stop being an ass, you're embarrassing the real professionals :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link_aggregation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EtherChannel
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPMP







Member since:
2005-07-06
Kokopelli is correct. You get full Ethernet bandwidth between the pairs of devices. But you need to use a little common sense, if there is only one cable between two switches and you run five sessions through that single cable the bandwidth is obviously going to be shared. To fix this add more cables and alternate paths.
Old Ethernet with coax was a bus like 802.11N and powerline. With old Ethernet only one device could talk at a time. In bus networks there is no way to add alternate paths. With old Ethernet you used hubs instead of switches.