ZyXEL Communications VSG1432-B101 Series Manual De Usuario

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 Chapter 6 Broadband
VSG1432-B101 Series User’s Guide
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6.3.7  ATM Traffic Classes
These are the basic ATM traffic classes defined by the ATM Forum Traffic 
Management 4.0 Specification. 
Constant Bit Rate (CBR)
Constant Bit Rate (CBR) provides fixed bandwidth that is always available even if 
no data is being sent. CBR traffic is generally time-sensitive (doesn't tolerate 
delay). CBR is used for connections that continuously require a specific amount of 
bandwidth. A PCR is specified and if traffic exceeds this rate, cells may be 
dropped. Examples of connections that need CBR would be high-resolution video 
and voice.
Variable Bit Rate (VBR) 
The Variable Bit Rate (VBR) ATM traffic class is used with bursty connections. 
Connections that use the Variable Bit Rate (VBR) traffic class can be grouped into 
real time (VBR-RT) or non-real time (VBR-nRT) connections. 
The VBR-RT (real-time Variable Bit Rate) type is used with bursty connections that 
require closely controlled delay and delay variation. It also provides a fixed 
amount of bandwidth (a PCR is specified) but is only available when data is being 
sent. An example of an VBR-RT connection would be video conferencing. Video 
conferencing requires real-time data transfers and the bandwidth requirement 
varies in proportion to the video image's changing dynamics. 
The VBR-nRT (non real-time Variable Bit Rate) type is used with bursty 
connections that do not require closely controlled delay and delay variation. It is 
commonly used for "bursty" traffic typical on LANs. PCR and MBS define the burst 
levels, SCR defines the minimum level. An example of an VBR-nRT connection 
would be non-time sensitive data file transfers.
Unspecified Bit Rate (UBR)
The Unspecified Bit Rate (UBR) ATM traffic class is for bursty data transfers. 
However, UBR doesn't guarantee any bandwidth and only delivers traffic when the 
network has spare bandwidth. An example application is background file transfer.
6.3.8  Introduction to VLANs 
A Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) allows a physical network to be partitioned 
into multiple logical networks. Devices on a logical network belong to one group. A 
device can belong to more than one group. With VLAN, a device cannot directly 
talk to or hear from devices that are not in the same group(s); the traffic must 
first go through a router.