You may be experiencing a buffer overrun.  3Com had this problem before.

Thanks, 


Mario Puras

JNCIS, CCNA, LSCP, MCP
SoluNet Technical Support 
Customer Support Engineer 
* Mailto: mpuras at solunet.com
* 888.449.5766 (USA) / 888.SOLUNET (Canada)



-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Cook [mailto:ccook at tcworks.net]
Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2002 12:14 PM
To: MPuras at solunet.com
Cc: j.veen at planetmediagroup.nl; ascend-users at max.bungi.com
Subject: Re: (ASCEND) Stac compression leading to performance hit on
maxTNT?


Wow!  That is really interesting... our Portmaster 3's do they SAME
thing.  Some of our ISDN customers that use STAC will just stop passing
traffic.  The CPE that is acting up are pipeline and cisco routers so I
do not think it is vendor specific.

-- 
Chris

o----< ccook at tcworks.net >------------------------------------o
|Chris Cook - Admin     |TCWORKS.NET - http://www.tcworks.net |
|The Computer Works ISP |FreeBSD - http://www.freebsd.org     |
o-------------------------------------------------------------o


MPuras at solunet.com wrote:
> 
> Hi Jeroen,
> 
>    The first thing I would say is that STAC compression must be supported
on
> both sides of the connection.  On the clients PC make sure that Enable
> software compression is enabled and that hardware compression is not.  A
> rule of thumb to follow is to disable software compression when hardware
> compression is available which typically is over a V.42bis-compliant modem
> and to enable it when hardware compression is not like over an ISDN
> connection (which almost all support STAC).  Also, Windows NT 4.0 and 2000
> do not support STAC.  Only PPP, MP, and MP+ links support
Link-Compression.
> For the Lucent/Ascend units,  Windows 95/98 equivalent is the MS-Stac
which
> supports Microsoft/Stac compression.  Stac-9 is the actual RFC Compression
> protocol.  If a caller does not support MS-Stac then it will negotiate for
> Stac and if that is not agreed upon, they use no compression relying on
the
> PPP.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Mario Puras
> 
> JNCIS, CCNA, LSCP, MCP
> SoluNet Technical Support
> Customer Support Engineer
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jeroen Veen [mailto:j.veen at planetmediagroup.nl]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2002 10:35 AM
> To: ascend-users at max.bungi.com
> Subject: (ASCEND) Stac compression leading to performance hit on maxTNT?
> 
> Hi,
> 
> We ran into some problems after enabling STAC compression (Datacompression
> for ISDN) on our TNT's. Customers were regularly complaining about
sessions
> in which the connection is established without problems but no data comes
> over the line after that at all.
> 
> If STAC is switched off there are (seemingly) no problems. If we switch
STAC
> back on we start experiencing the same problems again.
> 
> We think this may have something to do with the MAXTNT's not being able to
> process STAC for all those lines or something, but we're not sure.
> 
> Any thoughts/ideas, anyone?
> 
> Jeroen Veen
> Planet Technologies
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