Fifo Packet Threshold; Concurrent Udp Streams; Low-Priority Ratio; Natural Packet Interval - 3Com EtherLink III ISA User Manual

Network interface card
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The following advanced values can be modified to regulate PACE
traffic on the network.

FIFO Packet Threshold

Controls the number of non-PACE packets that the network driver
allows in the FIFO ahead of PACE packets. A smaller number
decreases the time between PACE packets, but it can also
decrease performance. The recommended setting is 3.

Concurrent UDP Streams

Controls the number of simultaneous multimedia UDP packet
streams that the network driver can handle at any given time. For
many applications, the number of UDP streams is the same as the
number of connections.
For example, a videoconference with three people at three
different sites uses three concurrent UDP streams for the video
data. The concurrent UDP streams setting must be a power of two
(2, 4, 8, 16, etc.), but the optimal value varies depending on your
PC and the application that you are running.
Although a video server can support up to 32 connections, a
client may only want to conference with four other people at a
time. The recommended setting is 16.

Low-Priority Ratio

When PACE support is enabled, high-priority packets are always
transmitted before low-priority packets. If a high-priority
application sends out a sufficiently high number of high-priority
packets, low-priority packets may not be sent.
To prevent this problem, the driver uses a ratio setting to
periodically send out a low-priority packet (if one is waiting to be
sent). For example, if a value of 1000 is entered, one low-priority
packet would be sent for every 1,000 high-priority packets. The
recommended setting is 25.

Natural Packet Interval

To communicate packet priority to interconnect devices
(repeaters, switches, and the like), the PACE driver slightly
modifies the Ethernet packet. Because of this, connection
problems may result when these modified packets are sent out for
long periods of time during which no low-priority packets are
sent. To get around this problem, the driver can be configured to
periodically send out an unaltered, natural packet. The
recommended setting is 180 seconds.
Advanced Options Tab
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