ZyXEL Communications Corporation VMG1312B10A Manual De Usuario

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Chapter 10 Quality of Service (QoS)
VMG1312-B10A User’s Guide
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10.8  Technical Reference
The following section contains additional technical information about the Device features described 
in this chapter.
IEEE 802.1Q Tag
The IEEE 802.1Q standard defines an explicit VLAN tag in the MAC header to identify the VLAN 
membership of a frame across bridges. A VLAN tag includes the 12-bit VLAN ID and 3-bit user 
priority. The VLAN ID associates a frame with a specific VLAN and provides the information that 
devices need to process the frame across the network. 
IEEE 802.1p specifies the user priority field and defines up to eight separate traffic types. The 
following table describes the traffic types defined in the IEEE 802.1d standard (which incorporates 
the 802.1p).  
DiffServ 
QoS is used to prioritize source-to-destination traffic flows. All packets in the flow are given the 
same priority. You can use CoS (class of service) to give different priorities to different packet 
types.
DiffServ (Differentiated Services) is a class of service (CoS) model that marks packets so that they 
receive specific per-hop treatment at DiffServ-compliant network devices along the route based on 
the application types and traffic flow. Packets are marked with DiffServ Code Points (DSCPs) 
indicating the level of service desired. This allows the intermediary DiffServ-compliant network 
devices to handle the packets differently depending on the code points without the need to 
negotiate paths or remember state information for every flow. In addition, applications do not have 
to request a particular service or give advanced notice of where the traffic is going. 
DSCP and Per-Hop Behavior 
DiffServ defines a new Differentiated Services (DS) field to replace the Type of Service (TOS) field 
in the IP header. The DS field contains a 2-bit unused field and a 6-bit DSCP field which can define 
up to 64 service levels. The following figure illustrates the DS field. 
Table 49   
IEEE 802.1p Priority Level and Traffic Type
PRIORITY 
LEVEL
TRAFFIC TYPE
Level 7
Typically used for network control traffic such as router configuration messages.
Level 6
Typically used for voice traffic that is especially sensitive to jitter (jitter is the 
variations in delay).
Level 5
Typically used for video that consumes high bandwidth and is sensitive to jitter.
Level 4
Typically used for controlled load, latency-sensitive traffic such as SNA (Systems 
Network Architecture) transactions.
Level 3
Typically used for “excellent effort” or better than best effort and would include 
important business traffic that can tolerate some delay.
Level 2
This is for “spare bandwidth”. 
Level 1
This is typically used for non-critical “background” traffic such as bulk transfers that 
are allowed but that should not affect other applications and users. 
Level 0
Typically used for best-effort traffic.