Wmm Qos; Wmm Qos Example; Wmm Qos Priorities; Table 40 Wmm Qos Priorities - ZyXEL Communications P-660HW-DX User Manual

802.11g wireless adsl 2+ 4-port gateway
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Chapter 7 Wireless LAN
Table 39 MAC Address Filter
LABEL
MAC
Address
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7.6 WMM QoS

WMM (Wi-Fi MultiMedia) QoS (Quality of Service) allows you to prioritize wireless traffic
according to the delivery requirements of individual services.
WMM is a part of the IEEE 802.11e QoS enhancement to certified Wi-Fi wireless networks.

7.6.1 WMM QoS Example

When WMM QoS is not enabled, all traffic streams are given the same access throughput to
the wireless network. If the introduction of another traffic stream creates a data transmission
demand that exceeds the current network capacity, then the new traffic stream reduces the
throughput of the other traffic streams.
When WMM QoS is enabled, the streams are prioritized according to the needs of the
application. You can assign different priorities to different applications. This prevents
reductions in data transmission for applications that are sensitive.

7.6.2 WMM QoS Priorities

The following table describes the priorities that you can apply to traffic that the ZyXEL
Device sends to the wireless network.

Table 40 WMM QoS Priorities

PRIORITY LEVELS:
Highest
High
Mid
Low
122
DESCRIPTION
Enter the MAC addresses of the wireless client that are allowed or denied access to
the ZyXEL Device in these address fields. Enter the MAC addresses in a valid MAC
address format, that is, six hexadecimal character pairs, for example,
12:34:56:78:9a:bc.
Click Apply to save your changes to the ZyXEL Device.
Click Cancel to reload the previous configuration for this screen.
Typically used for voice traffic or video that is especially sensitive to jitter
(variations in delay). Use the highest priority to reduce latency for improved voice
quality.
Typically used for video traffic which has some tolerance for jitter but needs to be
prioritized over other data traffic.
Typically used for traffic from applications or devices that lack QoS capabilities.
Use mid priority for traffic that is less sensitive to latency, but is affected by long
delays, such as Internet surfing.
This is typically used for non-critical "background" traffic such as bulk transfers
and print jobs that are allowed but that should not affect other applications and
users. Use low priority for applications that do not have strict latency and
throughput requirements.
P-660HW-Dx User's Guide

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