Introduction To Wred Configuration; Wred Configuration Approaches; Introduction To Wred Parameters; Configuring Wred On An Interface - H3C S7500E Series Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for S7500E Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Different from RED, WRED determines differentiated drop policies for packets with different IP
precedence values. Packets with a lower IP precedence are more likely to be dropped.

Introduction to WRED Configuration

WRED Configuration Approaches

On an S7500E series switch, WRED is implemented with WRED tables. WRED tables are created
globally in system view and then applied to interfaces.

Introduction to WRED Parameters

Determine the following parameters before configuring WRED:
The upper threshold and lower threshold: when the average queue size is smaller than the lower
threshold, no packet is dropped. When the average queue size is between the lower threshold
and the upper threshold, packets are dropped randomly. The longer a queue, the higher the drop
probability. When the average queue size exceeds the upper threshold, subsequent packets are
dropped.
Drop precedence: a parameter used for packet drop. The value 0 corresponds to green packets,
the value 1 corresponds to yellow packets, and the value 2 corresponds to red packets. Red
packets are dropped preferentially.
Denominator for drop probability calculation: the bigger the denominator is, the smaller the
calculated drop probability is.
The S7500E series switches do not support the upper drop threshold.

Configuring WRED on an Interface

The SA cards do not support WRED.
In a WRED table, drop parameters are configured on a per queue basis, because WRED regulates
packets on a per queue basis.
A WRED table can be applied to multiple interfaces. For a WRED table already applied to an interface,
you can modify the values of the WRED table, but you cannot remove the WRED table.

Configuration Procedure

Follow these steps to configure WRED:
7-2

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents