350-001 Cisco Certified Internetworking Expert
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Demo Question 23.
A newly deployed Cisco router is configured for Weighted Random Early Discard (WRED. on the EliteCertify network. WRED has which of the following two characteristics? (Choose two.)
A. Non-IP traffic is given the lowest priority and is more likely to be dropped
B. When the minimum threshold is crossed, WRED begins dropping all incoming packets (tail-drop)
C. Global Synchronization is avoided by selectively dropping packets from multiple TCP flows
D. Low bandwidth flows are experiencing packet drop at a higher rate than higher bandwidth flows
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Answer: A, C
Explanation: By randomly dropping packets prior to periods of high congestion, WRED tells the
packet source to decrease its transmission rate. If the packet source is using TCP, it will
decrease its transmission rate until all the packets reach their destination, which indicates
that the congestion is cleared.
WRED generally drops packets selectively based on IP precedence. Packets with a higher
IP precedence are less likely to be dropped than packets with a lower precedence. Thus,
the higher the priority of a packet, the higher the probability that the packet will be
delivered.
WRED reduces the chances of tail drop by selectively dropping packets when the output
interface begins to show signs of congestion. By dropping some packets early rather than
waiting until the queue is full, WRED avoids dropping large numbers of packets at once
and minimizes the chances of global synchronization. Thus, WRED allows the
transmission line to be used fully at all times.
In addition, WRED statistically drops more packets from large users than small.
Therefore, traffic sources that generate the most traffic are more likely to be slowed
down than traffic sources that generate little traffic.
WRED avoids the globalization problems that occur when tail drop is used as the
congestion avoidance mechanism. Global synchronization manifests when multiple TCP
hosts reduce their transmission rates in response to packet dropping, then increase their
transmission rates once again when the congestion is reduced.
WRED is only useful when the bulk of the traffic is TCP/IP traffic. With TCP, dropped
packets indicate congestion, so the packet source will reduce its transmission rate. With
other protocols, packet sources may not respond or may resend dropped packets at the
same rate. Thus, dropping packets does not decrease congestion.
WRED treats non-IP traffic as precedence 0, the lowest precedence. Therefore, non-IP
traffic, in general, is more likely to be dropped than IP traffic.
Reference:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps1835/products_configuration_guide_chapter09186a00800
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