664
C
HAPTER
47: Q
O
S O
VERVIEW
■
Differentiated service:
This is is a kind of multi-service model oriented to
different demands. It sorts the services into classes, and provides different
qualities of services according to the various classes without the support of
signal. Differentiated service adopts the following technologies:
■
Traffic policing: Performing the traffic policing for one or more or all flows.
■
Traffic shaping: Performing the traffic shaping for one or more or all flows.
■
Queue management: Performing congestion management for the queues
on the interface by employing the technologies such as FIFO, Priority Queue
(PQ), Customized Queue (CQ), Weighted Fair Queue (WFQ), Class-based
Weighted Fair Queue (CBWFQ).
■
Congestion avoidance: It is a traffic control mechanism that, by monitoring
the usage of the network resources (such as the queue or memory buffer),
removes the network overload by dropping packets on its own initiative to
adjust the network traffic in case of network congestion.
The QoS of the 3Com router is implemented based on the differentiated service,
and has the following functions:
■
Packet classification:
The services with different service quality requirements
are classified in the network edge. It is processed according to different packet
classifications in the core network.
■
Traffic policing:
Two token buckets are used to indicate the allowable burst
levels. Tokens are placed into each bucket at the same rate (CIR). The CBS (the
C bucket) is generally smaller than EBS (the E bucket). When traffic
conformance is being evaluated, if the C bucket has sufficient tokens, the
traffic is said to conform to allowable burst levels. If the C Bucket is short of
tokens but the E bucket has sufficient tokens, the traffic partially conforms to
allowable burst levels. If both the C and E buckets are short of tokens, the
traffic does not conform to the allowable burst levels.
■
Traffic shaping:
Performs the shaping on the flows that do not conform to
the predetermined traffic characteristics, to facilitate the bandwidth matching.
It may perform the shaping on each flow or all flows on the interface.
■
Interface Line Rate:
Provides a management approach to the network
bandwidth by limiting the physical interface bandwidth.
■
Congestion management:
Provides various queue mechanisms to relieve and
dispatch the congested packets when the interface congestion occurs.
■
Congestion avoidance:
Takes measures to avoid the congestion by estimating
the congestion status of the network. The congestion avoidance may reduce
the packet loss ratio and improve the efficiency of the network availability.
Benefits of QoS for
the Network Service
QoS can provide controllable and predictable services for network applications and
network traffic. Using QoS in the network can realize:
■
Control of network resources. The user can control the usage of network
resources. For example, the user may limit the bandwidth resource consumed
in the FTP transmission on a connection, or provide higher priority for the data
that are more important.
Summary of Contents for 3036
Page 1: ...http www 3com com 3Com Router Configuration Guide Published March 2004 Part No 10014299 ...
Page 4: ...VPN 615 RELIABILITY 665 QOS 681 DIAL UP 721 ...
Page 6: ...2 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 7: ...I GETTING STARTED Chapter 1 3Com Router Introduction Chapter 2 3Com Router User Interface ...
Page 8: ...4 ...
Page 16: ...12 CHAPTER 1 3COM ROUTER INTRODUCTION ...
Page 34: ...30 ...
Page 60: ...56 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM MANAGEMENT ...
Page 98: ...94 CHAPTER 6 DISPLAY AND DEBUGGING TOOLS ...
Page 110: ...106 ...
Page 114: ...110 CHAPTER 8 INTERFACE CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW ...
Page 158: ...154 CHAPTER 10 CONFIGURING WAN INTERFACE ...
Page 168: ...164 ...
Page 188: ...184 CHAPTER 13 CONFIGURING PPPOE CLIENT ...
Page 192: ...188 CHAPTER 14 CONFIGURING SLIP Router ip route static 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 110 0 1 ...
Page 248: ...244 CHAPTER 16 CONFIGURING LAPB AND X 25 ...
Page 320: ...316 ...
Page 330: ...326 CHAPTER 20 CONFIGURING IP ADDRESS ...
Page 362: ...358 CHAPTER 21 CONFIGURING IP APPLICATION ...
Page 374: ...370 CHAPTER 23 CONFIGURING IP COUNT ...
Page 406: ...402 CHAPTER 25 CONFIGURING DLSW ...
Page 408: ...404 ...
Page 452: ...448 CHAPTER 29 CONFIGURING OSPF ...
Page 482: ...478 CHAPTER 30 CONFIGURING BGP ...
Page 494: ...490 CHAPTER 31 CONFIGURING IP ROUTING POLICY ...
Page 502: ...498 ...
Page 508: ...504 CHAPTER 33 IP MULTICAST ...
Page 514: ...510 CHAPTER 34 CONFIGURING IGMP ...
Page 526: ...522 CHAPTER 36 CONFIGURING PIM SM ...
Page 528: ...524 ...
Page 532: ...528 CHAPTER 37 CONFIGURING TERMINAL ACCESS SECURITY ...
Page 550: ...546 CHAPTER 38 CONFIGURING AAA AND RADIUS PROTOCOL ...
Page 590: ...586 CHAPTER 40 CONFIGURING IPSEC ...
Page 599: ...IX VPN Chapter 42 Configuring VPN Chapter 43 Configuring L2TP Chapter 44 Configuring GRE ...
Page 600: ...596 ...
Page 638: ...634 CHAPTER 43 CONFIGURING L2TP ...
Page 649: ...X RELIABILITY Chapter 45 Configuring a Standby Center Chapter 46 Configuring VRRP ...
Page 650: ...646 ...
Page 666: ...662 ...
Page 670: ...666 CHAPTER 47 QOS OVERVIEW ...
Page 700: ...696 CHAPTER 49 CONGESTION MANAGEMENT ...
Page 706: ...702 CHAPTER 50 CONGESTION AVOIDANCE ...
Page 707: ...XII DIAL UP Chapter 51 Configuring DCC Chapter 52 Configuring Modem ...
Page 708: ...704 ...
Page 762: ...758 CHAPTER 52 CONFIGURING MODEM ...