In a message written on Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 09:43:44PM +0530, Glen Kent wrote: > Do transit routers in the wild actually get to do IP fragmentation > these days? I was wondering if routers actually do it or not, because > the source usually discovers the path MTU and sends its data with the > least supported MTU. Is this true?
Yes. A GigE jumbo frames host (9120) to a standard POS interface (4420) to a DS3 customer (1500) happens, and the GigE->POS and POS->DS3 routers must both do fragmentation. > I would wager that the vendors and operators would want to avoid IP > fragmentation since thats usually done in SW (unless you've got a very > powerful ASIC or your box is NP based). As far as I know the "big" routers all do it in hardware with no real performance penality; but I haven't studied in detail. -- Leo Bicknell - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - CCIE 3440 PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/
pgpyFz4VkMF6K.pgp
Description: PGP signature