Mocomtech CDM-570 Manuel D’Utilisation

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CDM-570/570L Satellite Modem with Optional IP Module 
Revision 4 
IP Module Ethernet Interface Overview 
MN/CDM570L.IOM 
Weighted Random Early Detection: The MIN-MAX and MAX-Priority QoS modes 
allow the user to enable or disable the WRED option. In Diffserv mode, WRED 
applicable to Asure forwarding only, however user can change the WRED option.   
WRED allows for more graceful dropping of packets, as QoS queues get full. Without 
WRED, typically packets are dropped based upon a simple tail drop algorithm, which 
was applied to packets as they were being added to the QoS queues. This can result in 
large numbers of contiguous packets being dropped which causes many protocols such as 
RTP and TCP to ungracefully degrade performance in an over-consumed or bursty 
scenario. WRED applies a randomization which means that the percentage change to 
drop packets 
 
System Latency: System latency is used to define the maximum duration that a packet 
will stay in a QoS queue. This mechanism serves to ensure that old packets are “aged” 
out of the system rather than waste satellite bandwidth on invalid packets. 
15.4.4.1 Maximum 
Bandwidth/Priority QoS Mode 
QoS Rules can be assigned to up to 32 different types of flows to be defined by the user.  
Flows can be defined by any combination of Protocol (FTP, UDP, RTP, etc.), 
Source/Destination IP (specific or range), and/or Layer 3 Source/Destination Port.  
 
Priority - A Priority level from 1 to 8 is assigned for each flow. The IP Module classifies 
each packet that is to be forwarded over the satellite. The packet will then have a Priority 
assigned according to the defined QoS Rules. Any packet that does not meet a QoS Rule 
is assigned to the Default Rule and will be assigned a Priority of 9. Priority 1 packets will 
be forwarded immediately, Priority 2 packets will be forwarded as soon as there are no 
Priority 1 packets in the Queue, and so on. Any latency critical traffic, such as VoIP/RTP 
should always be assigned Priority 1.  
 
Maximum Bandwidth - This can also be assigned to a flow to restrict the Maximum 
Bandwidth that any particular flow will utilize, or the default of no bandwidth restriction 
can be selected. 
 
Filtering - QoS also allows specific flows to be designated as “filtered,” so the IP 
Module will discard traffic that the user does not want to forward over a satellite link.  
 
QoS Rule Hierarchy - It is quite possible to have traffic that meets the definitions of 
several QoS Rules. All traffic will be classified into the first QoS Rule that is a match, or 
fall into the Default Rule. The most specific QoS Rule will always be first. For example, 
a QoS Rule that identified a Source and Destination IP Address would be assigned ahead 
of a rule that just defined RTP protocol. QoS Rules that have the same amount of 
variables defined are sorted as follows: 
 
15–9