Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Mon, 25 Feb 2002 10:46:22 +0800 (Taipei Standard Time)
From:      "Maren S. Leizaola" <maren@leizaola.com>
To:        Joe & Fhe Barbish <barbish@a1poweruser.com>
Cc:        FBSDQ <questions@FreeBSD.ORG>, Rod Person <roddierod@yahoo.com>
Subject:   RE: SQUEEEZING the most bandwidth out of a 33.6 modem
Message-ID:  <Pine.WNT.4.43.0202251022420.-408861@hades.leizaola.com>
In-Reply-To: <LPBBIGIAAKKEOEJOLEGOKEKKCIAA.barbish@a1poweruser.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Sun, 24 Feb 2002, Joe & Fhe Barbish wrote:

|
|
| -----Original Message-----
| From: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
| [mailto:owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG]On Behalf Of Maren S. Leizaola
| Sent: Sunday, February 24, 2002 11:04 AM
| To: Joe & Fhe Barbish
| Cc: FBSDQ; Rod Person
| Subject: RE: SQUEEEZING the most bandwidth out of a 33.6 modem
|
| On Sun, 24 Feb 2002, Joe & Fhe Barbish wrote:
|
| V.90 & V.92 have fall forward and fall backward to handle changing line
| conditions. I think you have missed the point of using s38. The conditions
| of each individual phone circuit vary greatly.

I personally doubt that the quality of channels on the T1 side of a 56K
modem pool varies a lot. It is rare that a channel in the T1 will have
problems.  What I am sure is the analogue side of the connection typically
of what is in ones home will vary a lot and the way it performs at
different times. ie, when you have bad weather, do you think it is the T1
that is having problems or your end?

| If the circuit is so poor when you dial in to your ISP that you only get
| connected at 48000 the likely hood of it getting better during it's use
| life time is very unlikely to none. By setting s38 to some minimum value
| the modem hardware will hangup the poor circuit and get a completely
| new, different circuit path each time it redials until it gets a connect
| rate higher that the one you specified in s38.  The key here is the new,
| different circuit path which may have better or worse line conditions.
| But the modem will keep trying until it finds a circuit the meets or
| surpasses the minimum connection speed you want.

No what you are really doing is redialing until your circuit is capable of
handshaking at 52K in that specific time. In a way it is not a bad thing
to do if your modem does not fall forward as expected, but don't expect to
be running at 52K because you got the 52K handshake, because in a few
minutes you will be down to 49.6K or lower if your line is not there.

In HK we have a service where you can use your line to send a fax to a
number. The system will pick up your number from your caller ID and give
you noise level and a little graph of the noise you have on your line.

One thing I did find when I ran the private wire was that if it had errors
the circuit would slow down and would stay at lower speed. Then I would
reset the modem and do a new handshake and go back to a higher speed. So
if you want to persue this "glorious" 52K I would also combine what you
say with a periodic (a couple of times per day?)  hang up to make sure
that some error did not make you fall down to 43K or less and you are
stuck there.

| 	Once the connection is made I know of no way to see the connect
| rate on the fly.

Ok.
Maren.


To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?Pine.WNT.4.43.0202251022420.-408861>