nanog mailing list archives
Re: why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ?
From: Warren Bailey <wbailey () satelliteintelligencegroup com>
Date: Thu, 30 May 2013 17:49:29 +0000
It also probably has something to do with oversubscription. Providers generally allocated trunks (most dial up providers I knew used Livingston Port Masters), however their subscriber base was much larger than the number of phone lines available to take incoming calls. If you time out idle users, you have more phone lines available to take calls. Even in the BBS days, we still had to wait our turn.. Usually it was a redial until we got a carrier. I'll agree with the configuration aspect, but I really think it has much more to do with resource allocation in a telco environment (n:1 oversub). //warren On 5/30/13 10:37 AM, "Valdis.Kletnieks () vt edu" <Valdis.Kletnieks () vt edu> wrote:
On Thu, 30 May 2013 09:10:21 -0000, Joe said:a question obsessed me for a long time. "why my pppoe connection to internet has a max session time, even if every thing goes ok? "From a provider's point of view, forcing a connection to re-establish itself every few days means that if you ever have to roll out a change, you don't end up with *That* *One* *User* who stays connected for weeks or even months with the old parameters.
Current thread:
- why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ? Joe (May 30)
- RE: why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ? Fred Reimer (May 30)
- Re: why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ? Clayton Zekelman (May 30)
- Re: why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ? Valdis . Kletnieks (May 30)
- Re: why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ? Warren Bailey (May 30)
- Re: why does dail-up or pppoe access always has session-timeout ? Jean-Francois Mezei (May 30)