What does “As long as multiple peers do not fail at the same time, no peer will see performance degradation that is caused by peer failures” really mean?
Barring lots of dropped packets, downstream peers should have the frames they need in time to play them. If your design relies on reorganization of the distribution tree before downstream peers can once again receive frames, then you must provide analysis that shows that, with high probability, the reorganization will happen quickly enough and the new parent(s) will have the appropriate frames. If your design does not require repair first, then you must show analysis that demonstrates that there is sufficient bandwidth to supply all downstream peers now that a peer is missing.
Related Questions
- What does "As long as multiple peers do not fail at the same time, no peer will see performance degradation that is caused by peer failures" really mean?
- What do time response and phase response mean and how do they affect speaker performance? Why do THIEL speakers have sloped baffles?
- Where can I find reliability information such as: Failure Rate, FIT (Failures in Time), and Mean Time to Failure (MTTF)?