Configuring Quality Of Service; Quality Of Service Overview; Defining General Qos Settings - D-Link xStack DES-3228PA Web/Installation Manual

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DES-3228PA Embedded Web System User Guide
Section 17. Configuring Quality of Service
This section contains information for configuring QoS, and includes the following topics:

Quality of Service Overview

Defining General QoS Settings

Configuring QoS Mapping
Configuring Basic Mode
Quality of Service Overview
Quality of Service (QoS) provides the ability to implement QoS and priority queuing within a network. For example,
certain types of traffic that require minimal delay, such as Voice, Video, and real-time traffic can be assigned a
high priority queue, while other traffic can be assigned a lower priority queue. The result is an improved traffic flow
for traffic with high demand. QoS is defined by:
Classification — Specifies which packet fields are matched to specific values. All packets matching the user-
defined specifications are classified together.
Action — Defines traffic management where packets are forwarded are based on packet information, and
packet field values such as VLAN Priority Tag (VPT) and DiffServ Code Point (DSCP).
VPT Classification Information
VLAN Priority Tags (VPT) are used to classify packets by mapping packets to one of the egress queues.
VPT-to-queue assignments are user-definable. Packets arriving untagged are assigned a default VPT value,
which is set on a per-port basis. The assigned VPT is used to map the packet to the egress queue.
CoS Services
After packets are assigned to a specific egress queue, CoS services can be assigned to the queue. Egress
queues are configured with a scheduling scheme by one of the following methods:
Strict Priority — Ensures that time-sensitive applications are always forwarded. Strict Priority (SP) allows
the prioritization of mission-critical, time-sensitive traffic over less time-sensitive applications.
For example, under SP, voice over IP (VoIP) traffic can be prioritized so that it is forwarded before FTP or
e-mail (SMTP) traffic.
Weighted Round Robin — Ensures that a single application does not dominate the device forwarding
capacity. Weighted Round Robin (WRR) forwards entire queues in a round robin order. All queues can
participate in WRR, expect SP queues. SP queues are serviced before WRR queues. If the traffic flow is
minimal, and SP queues do not occupy the whole bandwidth allocated to a port, the WRR queues can share
the bandwidth with the SP queues. This ensures that the remaining bandwidth is distributed according to the
weight ratio. If WRR is selected, the following weights are assigned to the queues: 1, 2, 4, 8.
Defining General QoS Settings
This section contains information for defining general QoS settings and includes the following topics:
Configuring CoS General Settings
Configure Bandwidth Settings
Defining Queues
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