republican-creole
Search:  

 
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » O Canada! » Canadian » TekSavvy » QoS question (sort of urgent)
Search Topic:
Uniqs:
205
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Posting:
Post a:
Post a:
mlppp dynamic.. ip range needs increase »
« "crtc to examine web control"  
AuthorAll Replies


jfmezei
Premium
join:2007-01-03
Beaconsfield, QC
·ELECTRONICBOX

QoS question (sort of urgent)

Question:

Is it technically correct to state that many routers today support QoS and can prioritise a user defined traffic ?

Also, in such a scenario, does the router set the "urgent" bit in the packet header ? Or is there no tagging of packets that are considered "priority" by the user ?

planiwa

join:2009-02-19
Toronto M5S

QoS in consumer-appliance routers is not the same as (original) internet-routing QoS.

Consumer-router QoS consists strictly of classifying traffic, and allocating the upstream bandwidth between the class-queues.

For each class there are two parameters:

MIN -- guranteed BW for this class
MAX -- maximum BW that this class may use, even if there are no queues of higher priority.

The idea behind all this is that by slowing Upstream traffic we can slow Downstream traffic, and removing upstream congestion will let higher priority traffic flow both ways.

While some routers make it possible to class-restrict downstream traffic as well, it is generally considered too late, since the BW is used up by the time the packed arrives, and discarding it will result in its being resent and using even more BW (&congestion).

What happens when the sum of the MINs exceeds 100% is undefined.
There is an implicit (but rarely stated) assumptions that the classes have an intrinsic priority sequence. Sometimes this is assumed to be implicit in their name (A,B,C ...). Sometimes it is assumed to be implied by their MIN value.
--
»[RFC] Connection / Speed Problems Checklist


An_Onymous

@teksavvy.com

reply to jfmezei
The user to define on a per physical port and/or /TCP/UDP port basis. They can reorder the packets in the Egress queue based on the priority.

The QoS only let the user set the Egress traffic as it has no control what so ever on the Ingress path.


Angelo_
The Network Guy
Premium
join:2002-06-18
reply to jfmezei
it's user descided... without the user setting what they consider is class 1 -6 for instance qos will never work...

Martian3

join:2004-10-17
Lindsay, ON
·TekSavvy Solutions..

reply to jfmezei
said by jfmezei See Profile :

Question:

Is it technically correct to state that many routers today support QoS and can prioritise a user defined traffic ?
It's technically correct, although I'd call it a partial answer due to the reasons mentioned above. QoS as implemented by consumer-grade networking hardware as not the same as QoS as implemented by commercial-grade stuff. So far as I know consumer-level QoS does not modify the outgoing packets in any way, but simply classifies it and queues it accordingly.

There's no way to implement downstream traffic shaping effectively at the router, if that's what you're asking; by the time it gets that far, it's already passed the major bottleneck, which is generally speaking the broadband link. If, for example, I wanted to throttle bittorrent traffic myself to ensure adequate bandwidth for a VoIP line, I'd have to do it in the bittorrent software or not at all. Since incoming traffic is in almost all cases solicited, this isn't usually a major concern.
-
Forums » O Canada! » Canadian » TekSavvymlppp dynamic.. ip range needs increase »
« "crtc to examine web control"  


Thursday, 10-Dec 13:21:21 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.republican-creole
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [200] Sprint Sued For Distracted Driving Death
· [131] AT&T Launching New 24 Mbps U-Verse Tier
· [82] 3G Network Test Says AT&T Is Tops
· [75] AT&T Hints At Usage-Based iPhone Data Pricing
· [72] Mediacom Unveils 105 Mbps Pricing
· [67] WPA Cracker: Test WPA-PSK Networks In 20 Minutes
· [66] Sprint Poised For A Turnaround?
· [51] The Future Of Wi-Fi Is Bright
· [47] Site Leaks Yahoo, Verizon Fed Data Share Pricing
· [45] Microwaving Your Innards Is Not 'Extreme'
Most people now reading
· IMG 1.7 (IMG Updates and Discussion) [Verizon FIOS TV]
· New Mediacom Email [Mediacom]
· Will Gearscore die now? [World of Warcraft]
· [WIN7] Well, I was dumb, but do I have recourse? [Microsoft Help]
· Cross Server Dungeon Experience [World of Warcraft]
· malware has been found hidden inside an Ubuntu screensaver [Security]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]
· [How to] Install Asterisk on an Asus WL-520GU router [VOIP Tech Chat]
· Lawyers Claim Palin Hack Suspect's PC Had Spyware [Security]
· 5 weeks and still no internet [TekSavvy]