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Maximum Delay Buffer Sizes Available to Interfaces

When you enable the large delay buffer feature on interfaces, a larger buffer is available for allocation to scheduler queues. The maximum delay buffer size that is available for an interface depends on the maximum available delay buffer time and the speed of the interface.

On channelized T1/E1 interfaces, the maximum delay buffer time varies by the number of DS0 channels configured on the interface as shown in Table 142. The default values are as follows:

Table 142: Maximum Available Delay Buffer Time by Channels

Channelized (NxDS0) Interfaces

Maximum Available Delay Buffer Time

1xDS0 through 3xDS0

4,000,000 microseconds (4 seconds)

4xDS0 through 7xDS0

2,000,000 microseconds (2 seconds)

8xDS0 through 15xDS0

1,000,000 microseconds (1 second)

16xDS0 through 32xDS0

500,000 microseconds (0.5 second)

You can calculate the maximum delay buffer size available for an interface, with the following formula:

interface speed x maximum delay buffer time = maximum available delay buffer size

For example, the following maximum delay buffer sizes are available to 1xDS0 and 2xDS0 interfaces:

1xDS0—64 kilobits per second x 4 seconds = 256 kilobits (32 kilobytes)

2xDS0—128 kilobits per second x 4 seconds = 512 kilobits (64 kilobytes)

If you configure a delay buffer size larger than the new maximum, the system allows you to commit the configuration but displays a system log warning message and uses the default buffer size setting instead of the configured maximum setting.


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