Chapter 5 WAN Setup
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Sustained Cell Rate (SCR) is the mean cell rate of each bursty traffic source. It specifies the
maximum average rate at which cells can be sent over the virtual connection. SCR may not be
greater than the PCR.
Maximum Burst Size (MBS) is the maximum number of cells that can be sent at the PCR.
After MBS is reached, cell rates fall below SCR until cell rate averages to the SCR again. At
this time, more cells (up to the MBS) can be sent at the PCR again.
If the PCR, SCR or MBS is set to the default of "0", the system will assign a maximum value
that correlates to your upstream line rate.
The following figure illustrates the relationship between PCR, SCR and MBS.
Figure 43
Example of Traffic Shaping
5.3.1 ATM Traffic Classes
These are the basic ATM traffic classes defined by the ATM Forum Traffic Management 4.0
Specification.
5.3.1.1 Constant Bit Rate (CBR)
Constant Bit Rate (CBR) provides fixed bandwidth that is always available even if no data is
being sent. CBR traffic is generally time-sensitive (doesn't tolerate delay). CBR is used for
connections that continuously require a specific amount of bandwidth. A PCR is specified and
if traffic exceeds this rate, cells may be dropped. Examples of connections that need CBR
would be high-resolution video and voice.
5.3.1.2 Variable Bit Rate (VBR)
The Variable Bit Rate (VBR) ATM traffic class is used with bursty connections. Connections
that use the Variable Bit Rate (VBR) traffic class can be grouped into real time (VBR-RT) or
non-real time (VBR-nRT) connections.
The VBR-RT (real-time Variable Bit Rate) type is used with bursty connections that require
closely controlled delay and delay variation. It also provides a fixed amount of bandwidth (a
PCR is specified) but is only available when data is being sent. An example of an VBR-RT
connection would be video conferencing. Video conferencing requires real-time data transfers
and the bandwidth requirement varies in proportion to the video image's changing dynamics.
Summary of Contents for P-660HW-D1 V2
Page 2: ......
Page 7: ...Safety Warnings P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 7...
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 8...
Page 10: ...Contents Overview P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 10...
Page 19: ...Table of Contents P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 19 Index 351...
Page 20: ...Table of Contents P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 20...
Page 26: ...List of Figures P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 26...
Page 31: ...31 PART I Introduction Introducing the ZyXEL Device 33 Introducing the Web Configurator 39...
Page 32: ...32...
Page 51: ...51 PART II Wizards Wizard Setup for Internet Access 53 Bandwidth Management Wizard 67...
Page 52: ...52...
Page 66: ...Chapter 3 Wizard Setup for Internet Access P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 66...
Page 72: ...Chapter 4 Bandwidth Management Wizard P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 72...
Page 74: ...74...
Page 92: ...Chapter 5 WAN Setup P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 92...
Page 128: ...Chapter 7 Wireless LAN P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 128...
Page 142: ...142...
Page 162: ...Chapter 10 Firewall Configuration P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 162 Figure 92 Firewall Edit Rule...
Page 176: ...Chapter 10 Firewall Configuration P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 176...
Page 180: ...Chapter 11 Content Filtering P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 180...
Page 182: ...182...
Page 186: ...Chapter 12 Static Route P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 186...
Page 202: ...Chapter 14 Dynamic DNS Setup P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 202...
Page 224: ...Chapter 16 Universal Plug and Play UPnP P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 224...
Page 226: ...226...
Page 232: ...Chapter 17 System P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 232...
Page 250: ...Chapter 18 Logs P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 250...
Page 256: ...Chapter 19 Tools P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 256...
Page 264: ...264...
Page 332: ...Appendix F Internal SPTGEN P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 332...
Page 346: ...Appendix J Legal Information P 660HW Dx v2 User s Guide 346...