Chapter 4 WAN
Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User’s Guide
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The following figure illustrates the relationship between PCR, SCR and MBS.
Figure 32
Example of Traffic Shaping
ATM Traffic Classes
These are the basic ATM traffic classes defined by the ATM Forum Traffic Management 4.0
Specification.
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.
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.
The VBR-nRT (non real-time Variable Bit Rate) type is used with bursty connections that do not
require closely controlled delay and delay variation. It is commonly used for "bursty" traffic typical
on LANs. PCR and MBS define the burst levels, SCR defines the minimum level. An example of an
VBR-nRT connection would be non-time sensitive data file transfers.
Unspecified Bit Rate (UBR)
The Unspecified Bit Rate (UBR) ATM traffic class is for bursty data transfers. However, UBR doesn't
guarantee any bandwidth and only delivers traffic when the network has spare bandwidth. An
example application is background file transfer.
Summary of Contents for P8701T
Page 10: ...Table of Contents Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 10...
Page 11: ...11 PART I User s Guide...
Page 12: ...12...
Page 18: ...Chapter 1 Introducing the VDSL Router Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 18...
Page 59: ...59 PART II Technical Reference...
Page 60: ...60...
Page 118: ...Chapter 6 Network Address Translation NAT Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 118...
Page 148: ...Chapter 10 DNS Setup Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 148...
Page 158: ...Chapter 11 UPnP Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 158...
Page 166: ...Chapter 12 USB Services Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 166...
Page 198: ...Chapter 14 Wireless Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 198...
Page 202: ...Chapter 15 Diagnostic Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 202...
Page 206: ...Chapter 16 Settings Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 206...
Page 210: ...Chapter 17 Log Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 210...
Page 214: ...Chapter 18 TR 069 Client Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 214...
Page 216: ...Chapter 19 Internet Time Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 216...
Page 218: ...Chapter 20 Access Control Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 218...
Page 222: ...Chapter 22 Reboot Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 222...
Page 230: ...Chapter 23 Troubleshooting Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 230...
Page 234: ...Appendix A Legal Information Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 234...
Page 240: ...Index Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8701T User s Guide 240...