09-04-2003
Response time under packet loss
I am experiencing a problem where under a dial condition I am experiencing packet loss, which is failrly normal, but the response to the packet loss is taking bewteen 6 and 10 seconds. Could someone please advise what the industry standard is on the response time under a packet loss senario.
7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi all,
If I give ls , it lists files in 1 second.
It I give ls -l , it takes 8 seconds
There are only 55 files in the directory.
Any explanation?
Thanks
Wilson (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: geraldwilson
4 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
in HP-UX how i can measure the response time
and how can i find the maximum IO (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: salhoub
1 Replies
3. IP Networking
I have 4 network ports on our T5240 sun server.
all but 1 gives packet losses (nxge1)
nxge0 gives on average 50% packet loss, very bad.
nxge2 gives on average 1-2% packet loss.
nxge3 gives on average 20% packet loss.
Is there a tool or something to help me find the problem? (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: photon
11 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi,
I am using the ce interface on my Solaris 9 server and there is significant packet loss when transmitting large packets. Does anyone have a fix for this?
----10.1.0.0 PING Statistics----
51 packets transmitted, 42 packets received, 17% packet loss
round-trip (ms) min/avg/max =... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: sparcman
12 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a running log file (jboss_server.log) which rotates at midnight . I need to constantly check and calculate the time for each thread and alert if it doesnt complete within 60 minute. For example my log file has following printed .
I want to run a script in cron every 30 minutes and... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gubbu
2 Replies
6. AIX
(5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vishal_dba
5 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All
I have been asked to write scripts within our monitoring tool for a vast requirement set.
One of the requirements is below:
• Lowest, Highest & Average response times of the Documentum process threads serving client requests
Essentially they want a view where we can see the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: simpsa27
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
opusdec
opusdec(1) opus-tools opusdec(1)
NAME
opusdec - decode audio from Opus format to WAV (or simple audio output)
SYNOPSIS
opusdec [ -hv ] [ --mono ] [ --stereo ] [ --rate Hz ] [ --no-dither ] [ --packet-loss pct ] [ --save-range file ] input.opus [ output.wav ]
DESCRIPTION
opusdec decodes Opus files into PCM Wave (uncompressed) files.
If the input file is specified as - , then opusdec will read from stdin. Likewise, an output filename of - will cause output to be to std-
out.
If no output is specified opusdec will attempt to play the audio in realtime if it supports audio playback on your system.
OPTIONS
-h, --help
Print help message
-v, --version
Display version information
--quiet
Suppresses program output
--mono
Force decoding in mono
--stereo
Force decoding in stereo
--rate
Force decoding at sampling rate n Hz
--no-dither
Do not dither 16-bit output
--packet-loss
Simulate n % random Opus packet loss
--save-range
Saves check values for every frame to a file
EXAMPLES
Decode a file input.opus to output.wav
opusdec input.opus output.wav
Play a file input.opus and force output at 48000 regardless of the original sampling rate
(48kHz output may be faster, due to avoiding resampling and some sound hardware produces higher quality output when run at 48kHz)
opusdec --rate 48000 input.opus
Re-encode a high bitrate Opus file to a lower rate
opusdec input.opus - | opusenc --bitrate 64 - output.opus
Play an http stream http://icecast.somwhere.org:8000/stream.opus with the help of curl on a system with pulseaudio
(press ctrl-c to quit)
curl http://icecast.somwhere.org:8000/stream.opus | padsp opusdec -
AUTHORS
Jean-Marc Valin <jmvalin@jmvalin.ca>
Gregory Maxwell <greg@xiph.org>
BUGS
Opusdec does not currently reject all invalid files which it should reject. It also doesn't provide very helpful output for the corrupted
files it does reject. Use opusinfo(1) for somewhat better diagnostics.
SEE ALSO
opusenc(1), opusinfo(1)
Xiph.Org Foundation 2012-05-28 opusdec(1)