Chapter 7 Basic Setting
ONU User’s Guide
71
Priority Queue Assignment
IEEE 802.1p defines up to eight separate traffic types by inserting a tag into a MAC-layer frame that
contains bits to define class of service. Frames without an explicit priority tag are given the default
priority of the ingress port. Use the following fields to configure the priority level-to-physical queue
mapping.
The ONU has four physical queues that you can map to the 8 priority levels. On the ONU, traffic
assigned to higher index queues gets through faster while traffic in lower index queues is dropped if
the network is congested.
Priority Level (The following descriptions are based on the traffic types defined in the IEEE 802.1d
standard (which incorporates the 802.1p).
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”.
Level 1
This is typically used for non-critical “background” traffic such as bulk transfers that
are allowed but that should not affect other applications and users.
Level 0
Typically used for best-effort traffic.
Apply
Click
Apply
to save your changes to the ONU’s run-time memory. The ONU loses
these changes if it is turned off or loses power, so use the
Save
link on the top
navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are
done configuring.
Cancel
Click
Cancel
to begin configuring this screen afresh.
Table 10
Basic Setting > Switch Setup (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Summary of Contents for ONU-2024 Series
Page 2: ......
Page 7: ...Safety Warnings ONU User s Guide 7 This product is recyclable Dispose of it properly...
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings ONU User s Guide 8...
Page 20: ...Table of Contents ONU User s Guide 20...
Page 28: ...List of Tables ONU User s Guide 28...
Page 30: ...30...
Page 38: ...Chapter 2 Hardware Installation and Connection ONU User s Guide 38...
Page 44: ...Chapter 3 Hardware Connections ONU User s Guide 44...
Page 46: ...46...
Page 64: ...Chapter 6 System Status and Port Statistics ONU User s Guide 64...
Page 76: ...Chapter 7 Basic Setting ONU User s Guide 76...
Page 78: ...78...
Page 108: ...Chapter 11 Spanning Tree Protocol ONU User s Guide 108...
Page 158: ...Chapter 20 Authentication Accounting ONU User s Guide 158...
Page 174: ...Chapter 22 Loop Guard ONU User s Guide 174...
Page 175: ...175 PART IV IP Application Static Route 177 Differentiated Services 181 DHCP 185...
Page 176: ...176...
Page 180: ...Chapter 23 Static Route ONU User s Guide 180...
Page 192: ...192...
Page 216: ...Chapter 27 Access Control ONU User s Guide 216...
Page 222: ...Chapter 29 Syslog ONU User s Guide 222...
Page 236: ...236...
Page 254: ...Appendix C Legal Information ONU User s Guide 254...
Page 260: ...Appendix D Customer Support ONU User s Guide 260...
Page 268: ...Index ONU User s Guide 268...