Le 11 avr. 09 à 00:03, Marshall Eubanks a écrit :
What level of packet loss would trigger response from network
operators ? How bad does a sustained packet loss need
to be before it is viewed as a problem to be fixed ? Conversely,
what is a typical packet loss fraction during periods
of good network performance ?
It really depend on a lot of parameters and it's why I think this
approach is not relevent at all since IP centric solutions.
In past, some peoples said that if you loose less than 0,1% of packet,
all is good.
Now, you can loose 1% of packet and acheive something that work for
the end user with Flash 10 technology and ... despite all you can
loose 0,01% packet and see a lot of defaults because HD / 8 Mbps /
H264 encoding. (we've presented that with Cisco last year at IBC
Amsterdam)
Fortunatly if you thing about IP centric solution, you can install
enough intelligence in the Set Top Box, for exemple or on a PC client
side in order to :
- re-ask paquets
- and / or repair missing one (fec)
Booth of this solution are in operation today and permit a really not
too bad IPTV with DSL long lines in many operators that I know.
(To be clear, I am aware that many ISPs offer some sort of MPLS
service with a packet loss SLA for video carriage. I am really
asking about
Internet transport here, although I would be pleased to learn of
MPLS statistics if anyone wants to provide them.)
You can ask what you want to yours ISP but the magic is : all can
happen and loss packet and jitter are not relevent at all !
Then solution is not to ask 100% SLA to ISP (except if you find some
crazy man to offer you this with good penalty) but to take care about
your service, with a real end to end monitoring. There is no more
correlation between backbone artefacts and human artefacts. Best way
is a user centric monitoring, top down approach that can understand if
all is good at service / application / usage level, in order to
control principal real artefacts (blockiness, jerkiness, bluriness and
availability of image and sound). That's exist, you can believe me ;-)
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Jean-Michel Planche www.jmp.net
www.twitter.com/jmplanche 2.0
j...@witbe.net www.witbe.net
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www.internetforeveryone.fr
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