Ask Question

Suppose Host A wants to send a large file to Host B. The path from Host A to Host B has three links, of rates R1 = 500 kbps, R2 = 2 Mbps, and R3 = 1 Mbps. a. Assuming no other traffic in the network, what is the throughput for the file transfer? b. Suppose the file is 4 million bytes. Dividing the file size by the throughput, roughly how long will it take to transfer the file to Host B? c. Repeat (a) and (b), but now with R2 reduced to 100 kbps

+2
Answers (1)
  1. 30 November, 12:53
    0
    Answer & Explanation:

    a)

    Throughput means the speed of the slowest link which is bottleneck for the network.

    In the above case R1 = 500kbps is the throughput for file transfer.

    b) Give file size = 4 million bytes = 4 * 1,000,000 * 8 bits = 32,000,000 bits =

    Time taken to transfer the file = filesize/throughput = 32,000,000/500,000 = 64 seconds

    When R2 reduced to 100kbps

    a)

    In this case R2 = 100kbps is the throughput for file transfer.

    b) Give file size = 4 million bytes = 4 * 1,000,000 * 8 bits = 32,000,000 bits =

    Time taken to transfer the file = filesize/throughput = 32,000,000/100,000 = 320 seconds
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “Suppose Host A wants to send a large file to Host B. The path from Host A to Host B has three links, of rates R1 = 500 kbps, R2 = 2 Mbps, ...” in 📗 Computers & Technology if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers