Understanding Qos For Wireless Lans; Qos For Wireless Lans Versus Qos On Wired Lans; Impact Of Qos On A Wireless Lan; Wi-Fi Multimedia - Cisco ISR Configuration Manual

Wireless isr and hwic access point
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Understanding QoS for Wireless LANs

Understanding QoS for Wireless LANs
Typically, networks operate on a best-effort delivery basis, which means that all traffic has equal priority
and an equal chance of being delivered in a timely manner. When congestion occurs, all traffic has an
equal chance of being dropped.
When you configure QoS on the access point, you can select specific network traffic, prioritize it, and
use congestion-management and congestion-avoidance techniques to provide preferential treatment.
Implementing QoS in your wireless LAN makes network performance more predictable and bandwidth
utilization more effective.
When you configure QoS, you create QoS policies and apply the policies to the VLANs configured on
your access point. If you do not use VLANs on your network, you can apply your QoS policies to the
access point's Ethernet and radio ports.
When you enable QoS, the access point uses Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM) mode by default. See the
Note
Wi-Fi Multimedia Mode" section on page 9-4

QoS for Wireless LANs Versus QoS on Wired LANs

The QoS implementation for wireless LANs differs from QoS implementations on other Cisco devices.
With QoS enabled, access points perform the following:
To contrast the wireless LAN QoS implementation with the QoS implementation on other Cisco network
devices, see the Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios122/122cgcr/fqos_c/index.htm

Impact of QoS on a Wireless LAN

Wireless LAN QoS features are a subset of the proposed 802.11e draft. QoS on wireless LANs provides
prioritization of traffic from the access point over the WLAN based on traffic classification.
Just as in other media, you might not notice the effects of QoS on a lightly loaded wireless LAN. The
benefits of QoS become more obvious as the load on the wireless LAN increases, keeping the latency,
jitter, and loss for selected traffic types within an acceptable range.
Cisco Wireless ISR and HWIC Access Point Configuration Guide
9-2
They do not classify packets; they prioritize packets based on DSCP value, client type (such as a
wireless phone), or the priority value in the 802.1q or 802.1p tag.
They do not construct internal DSCP values; they only support mapping by assigning IP DSCP,
Precedence, or Protocol values to Layer 2 COS values.
They carry out EDCF like queuing on the radio egress port only.
They do only FIFO queueing on the Ethernet egress port.
They support only 802.1Q/P tagged packets. Access points do not support ISL.
They support only MQC policy-map set cos action.
They prioritize the traffic from voice clients (such as Symbol phones) over traffic from other clients
when the QoS Element for Wireless Phones feature is enabled.
They support Spectralink phones using the class-map IP protocol clause with the protocol value set
to 119.
for information on WMM.
Chapter 9
Configuring QoS
"Using
OL-6415-04

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