Hello,
I recently saw a tip at Wireshark University
site that talked about isolating the location of packet loss based upon some
specifics around the retransmission event.
I understand the concept that seeing the same packet twice,
means that Wireshark used this as the criterion to declare the retransmission
and the capture was performed closer to the sender side.
The tip goes on to state that if the packet is not seen twice
(same SN) near the declared retransmission, then the packet loss was downstream
(closer to the receiver) farther away from the capture location.
My question is, if it is not due to Triple Dup ACKS, how
does Wireshark declare retransmission? This is the only way I can think
of that the loss can be pinpointed in terms of downstream. In other
words, the receiver sends Trip Dup ACKs, and Wireshark declares
retransmissions, then the isolation to downstream could be made.
Is there another technique that Wireshark uses besides “seeing
the same packet twice” or Trip Dup ACKs?
Thanks,
Barry
Principal Member of Technical Staff
JDSU Communication Test (formerly Acterna)
Emerging Markets and Technology
Research
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