GarrettCom MNS-6K Manual De Usuario

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Chapter 
15 
15 – Quality of Service 
Prioritize traffic in a network 
uality of Service (QoS) refers to the capability of a network to provide different 
priorities to different types of traffic. Not all traffic in the network has the same 
priority. Being able to differentiate different types of traffic and allowing this 
traffic to accelerate through the network improves the overall performance of 
the network and provides the necessary quality of service demanded by different 
users and devices.  The primary goal of QoS is to provide priority including 
dedicated bandwidth.   
 
QoS concepts
 
The Magnum 6K family of switches supports QoS as 
specified in the IEEE 802.1p and IEEE 802.1q standards. 
QoS is important in network environments where there are 
time-critical applications, such as voice transmission or video conferencing, which 
can be adversely effected by packet transfer delays or other latency in a network.  
 
Most switches today implement buffers to queue incoming packets as well as 
outgoing packets. In a queue mechanism, normally the packet which comes in first 
leaves first (FIFO) and all the packets are serviced accordingly. Imagine, if each 
packet had a priority assigned to it. If a packet with a higher priority than other 
packets were to arrive in a queue, the packet would be given a precedence and 
moved to the head of the queue and would go out as soon as possible. The packet is 
thus preempted from the queue and this method is called preemptive queuing. 
 
Preemptive queuing makes sense if there are several levels of priorities, normally 
more than two. If there are too many levels, then the system has to spend a lot of 
time managing the preemptive nature of queuing. IEEE 802.1p defines and uses 
eight levels of priorities. The eight levels of priority are enumerated 0 to 7, with 0 the 
lowest priority and 7 the highest. 
 
To make the preemptive queuing possible, most switches implement at least two 
queue buffers. The Magnum 6K family of switches has two priority queues, 1 (low) 
and 0 (high).When tagged packets enter a switch port, the switch responds by placing 
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