Quality Of Service; Using Differentiated Services (Diffserv) - Dell Force10 S2410-01-10GE-24P Configuration Manual

Sftos configuration guide
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Quality of Service

This chapter contains the following major sections:
Using Differentiated Services (DiffServ) on page 177
•Deploying DiffServ on page 180
•Monitoring DiffServ on page 184
•Configuring Differentiated Services by Department on page 191
•Configuring Differentiated Services for Voice over IP on page 194

Using Differentiated Services (DiffServ)

This section contains the following subsections:
Deploying DiffServ on page 180
Monitoring DiffServ on page 184
Configuring Differentiated Services by Department on page 191
Configuring Differentiated Services for Voice over IP on page 194
For syntax details on commands discussed in this chapter, see Chapter 19 (Quality of Service (QoS)
Commands) in the SFTOS Command Reference. That chapter also provides syntax statements for Class of
Service commands (CoS). See also, in this chapter,
for more information on controlling traffic.
Differentiated Services (DiffServ) is one technique for implementing Quality of Service (QoS) policies.
Using DiffServ in your network allows you to directly configure the relevant parameters on the switches
and routers rather than using a resource reservation protocol.This section explains how to configure the
S-Series to identify which traffic class a packet belongs to and how the packet should be handled to
provide the desired quality of service. As implemented on the S-Series, DiffServ allows you to control
what traffic is accepted, what traffic is transmitted, and what bandwidth guarantees are provided.
How you configure DiffServ support on the S-Series will likely vary depending on the role of the switch in
your network:
Edge device: An edge device handles ingress traffic, flowing towards the core of the network, and
egress traffic, flowing away from the core. An edge device will segregate inbound traffic into a small
set of traffic classes, and is responsible for determining a packet's classification. Classification will be
primarily based on the contents of the Layer 3 and Layer 4 headers, and will be recorded in the
Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) added to a packet's IP header.
Using Differentiated Services (DiffServ) on page
12
177,
Quality of Service | 177

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