Chapter 32 profile Commands
level
weight
This command configures the IPQoS profile's queues.
The following example sets the EXAMPLE IPQoS profile's queue 1 to use a PIR of 1088
kbps, CIR or 1024 kbps, PBS of 3072 bytes, and CBS or 3072 bytes; displays the profile's
settings; and sets the VDSL port 1 in slot 6 to use the profile.
ras> profile ipqos queue EXAMPLE 1 1088 1024 3072 3072
ras> profile ipqos show EXAMPLE
ipqos profile : EXAMPLE
queue number
idx
pir
--- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
0 131072
1
1088
2 131072
3 131072
4 131072
5 131072
6 131072
7 131072
ras> port vdsl ipqos 6-1 EXAMPLE
32.12.4 profile ipqos map Command
Syntax:
profile ipqos map <profile>
This command displays the associated ports using the specified IPQoS profile.
ras> profile ipqos map EXAMPLE
slot
---- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901
2 ------------------------
3 ------------------------
4 ------------------------------------------------
5 ------------------------------------------------
32.12.5 profile ipqos delete Command
Syntax:
profile ipqos delete <profile>
788
Set the queue's priority level 0~7. The larger the number, the higher
the priority.
You can configure different IPQoS profiles with queues that have
the same queue priority level. IPQoS then uses Weighted Round
Robin (WRR) scheduling to service these queues on a rotating
basis based on their queue weight. Use these fields to set the
priority weight (1~127) of each queue in an IPQoS profile. The
higher a queue's weight, the more service it gets.
: 8
cir
pbs
cbs
level
65536
65536
65536
1024
3072
3072
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
65536
port
1
2
weight
0
50
1
50
2
50
3
50
4
50
5
50
6
50
7
50
3
4
5
MSC1000G/1024G/1224G Series User's Guide
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