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eir F1000 Modem U
ser’s Guide
Chapter 8 Quality of Service (QoS)
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 51
Network Setting > QoS > Monitor
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Refresh Interval
Enter how often you want the Device to update this screen. Select
No Refresh
to stop
refreshing statistics.
Interface Monitor
#
This is the index number of the entry.
Name
This shows the name of the interface on the Device.
Pass Rate
This shows how many packets forwarded to this interface has been transmitted
successfully.
Drop Rate
This shows how many packets forwarded to this interface has been dropped.
Queue Monitor
#
This is the index number of the entry.
Name
This shows the name of the queue.
Pass Rate
This shows how many packets assigned to this queue has been transmitted successfully.
Drop Rate
This shows how many packets assigned to this queue has been dropped.
8.8 Technical Reference
The following section contains additional technical information about the Device features described
in this chapter.
IEEE 802.1Q Tag
The IEEE 802.1Q standard defines an explicit VLAN tag in the MAC header to identify the VLAN
membership of a frame across bridges. A VLAN tag includes the 12-bit VLAN ID and 3-bit user
priority. The VLAN ID associates a frame with a specific VLAN and provides the information that
devices need to process the frame across the network.
IEEE 802.1p specifies the user priority field and defines up to eight separate traffic types. The
following table describes the traffic types defined in the IEEE 802.1d standard (which incorporates
the 802.1p).
Table 52
IEEE 802.1p Priority Level and Traffic Type
PRIORITY
LEVEL
TRAFFIC TYPE
Level 7
Typically used for network control traffic such as router configuration messages.
Level 6
Typically used for voice traffic that is especially sensitive to jitter (jitter is the
variations in delay).
Level 5
Typically used for video that consumes high bandwidth and is sensitive to jitter.
Level 4
Typically used for controlled load, latency-sensitive traffic such as SNA (Systems
Network Architecture) transactions.
Level 3
Typically used for “excellent effort” or better than best effort and would include
important business traffic that can tolerate some delay.
Level 2
This is for “spare bandwidth”.
Summary of Contents for eir F1000
Page 4: ...4 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Contents Overview Diagnostic 273 Troubleshooting 279...
Page 14: ...14 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Table of Contents...
Page 15: ...PART I User s Guide 15...
Page 16: ...16...
Page 27: ...27 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 2 The Web Configurator Figure 10 Connection Status...
Page 33: ...PART II Technical Reference 33...
Page 34: ...34...
Page 68: ...68 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 4 Broadband...
Page 134: ...134 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 7 Routing...
Page 170: ...170 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 9 Network Address Translation NAT...
Page 180: ...Chapter 11 Interface Group 180 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 186: ...186 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 12 USB Service...
Page 200: ...200 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 15 Parental Control...
Page 210: ...210 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 17 Certificates...
Page 228: ...Chapter 19 Log 228 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 248: ...248 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 27 User Account...
Page 252: ...Chapter 28 Remote Management 252 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 254: ...254 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Chapter 29 TR 064...
Page 260: ...Chapter 31 Time Settings 260 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 266: ...Chapter 33 Log Setting 266 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 272: ...Chapter 35 Configuration 272 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 278: ...Chapter 36 Diagnostic 278 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide...
Page 324: ...324 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Appendix C Pop up Windows JavaScripts and Java Permissions...
Page 338: ...338 eir F1000 Modem User s Guide Appendix D Wireless LANs...