Feature History For Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing; Class-Default Class; Cbwfq And Bandwidth Allocation - Cisco 10000 Series Configuration Manual

Quality of service configuration guide
Hide thumbs Also See for 10000 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 12
Sharing Bandwidth Fairly During Congestion
Configuring CBWFQ involves the following processes:

Feature History for Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing

Cisco IOS Release
Release 12.0(19)SL
Release 12.2(16)BX
Release 12.2(28)SB
Release 12.2(31)SB2

Class-Default Class

The class-default class is used to classify traffic that does not fall into one of the defined classes in a
policy map. After the router classifies a packet, the router applies all the standard mechanisms that are
used to differentiate service among the classes. The class-default class is predefined when you create the
policy map, but you must configure it. If you do not configure the default class, then by default the traffic
that does not match any of the configured classes in a policy map is FIFO-classified and given best-effort
treatment.

CBWFQ and Bandwidth Allocation

CBWFQ allows you to specify the exact amount of bandwidth to allocate for a specific class of traffic.
Distributing bandwidth on a link using the bandwidth command ensures that bandwidth is shared fairly
among competing traffic. The router uses class queues to allocate bandwidth, first servicing priority
queue traffic followed by either bandwidth guarantee or bandwidth remaining queue traffic. By default,
a minimum bandwidth guaranteed queue has buffers for up to 50 milliseconds of 256-byte packets at line
rate, but not less than 32 packets. The router does not ensure latency characteristics for bandwidth
queues.
After the router allocates bandwidth to priority and bandwidth guaranteed class queues, the router
divides unused (excess) bandwidth among the packets remaining in the class queues.
For more information about distributing bandwidth across class queues, including how bandwidth is
calculated, see
OL-7433-09
Classifying traffic—This process uses class maps to define the classification criteria the router uses
to differentiate one traffic class from another.
Associating class characteristics with each traffic class—This process uses policy maps to define the
class characteristics (policy actions) the router applies to packets belonging to one of the traffic
classes.
Attaching policies to interfaces—This process uses the service-policy command to associate an
existing policy map (service policy) with an interface. The router applies the policy actions defined
in the service policy to the traffic on the interface that belongs to the traffic classes defined in the
service policy.
Description
The class-based weighted fair queuing (CBWFQ) feature
was introduced on the router.
This feature was introduced on the PRE2.
This feature was integrated in Cisco IOS
Release 12.2(28)SB for the PRE2.
This feature was introduced on the PRE3.
Chapter 5, "Distributing Bandwidth Between Queues."
Cisco 10000 Series Router Quality of Service Configuration Guide
Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing
Required PRE
PRE1
PRE2
PRE2
PRE3
12-3

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents