benchmarkman 0 Newbie Poster

There is a queuing example problem in a textbook. I'm not enrolled in a class and I am doing this work for my own self, otherwise I'd ask the professor. I'm pretty sure I know the answer but I want to know for 100%. I believe it should be an m/m/1 queue. Please correct me if I am wrong. My think is m/m because posson arrival rate and exponential packet length and 1 because there is a single router, ie queue. Am I right? What if I make the packet length a fixed size of 1500 bits? Wouuld that make it an M/G/1 or M/D/1 Queue? I was thinking M/D/1 since this would make the service rate determistic since everything is the same size? I'm unsure though because the text book never talks about M/D/1 queues and I doubt they would put a problem if the book if they didn't go over it.

Thanks

Single router that forwards traffic from 10 nodes. Arrival rate is
poisson and packet length is exponentially distributed size 1500bits.

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