3com S330 Manuale Utente

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CTX Switch
211
The default memory configuration uses all available memory. In order to reallocate 
memory to a given queue, you must first deallocate it from one of the other 
queues.
Since the CTX is output-buffered, and if the WAN trunk has the lowest speed (for 
nxT1/E1), the WAN trunk should take up most of the buffer.
CBR traffic (voice and video) requires the least latency during transmission, while 
VBR traffic (email and FTP) is more tolerable to delays but more sensitive to errors. 
The PathBuilder S330/S310 platform handles these traffic patterns with multiple 
levels of priorities. Each switch port, except the first T1/E1 UNI port, has two 
queues: one for high and one for low. The first T1/E1 UNI port or IMA group has 
four queues: one for high (0), one for medium (1), and two for low (2,3) with 
multiple traffic shapers.
To get a practical feel for the queue size configuration, consider an example in 
which the PathBuilder S330 is configured on the trunk side with a single group of 
4 x T1/E1. The other three groups on the trunk are not used. In this case, all the 
cells coming from the high-speed OC3/STM-1 are going to end up in the T1/E1 
buffers.
You could partition the memory on the trunk side as follows (with one block 
equalling 256 cells and the minimum queue size being 3 blocks):
n
The T1/E1 buffer could be configured to 48K (192 blocks) cells large.
n
The high queue could be 768 cells or 3 blocks (normally small),
n
The medium queue could be up to 16 blocks large, depending on the number 
of connections and the bursts tolerated.
The remaining 173 blocks could be divided evenly among the two low queues. 
You could partition the remaining 16K cells (64 blocks) as follows:
n
3 blocks for expansion slot 7 high
n
3 blocks for expansion slot 7 low
n
3 blocks for OC3/STM-1 2 high
n
26 blocks for OC3/STM-1 low
n
3 blocks for SAR high
n
26 blocks for SAR low
This is just an example; normally the lower the speed, the more buffering is 
needed. When the T1/E1 IMA is configured for more than one group, then the 
first group gets four queues and the rest get two queues. In most cases, if the 
groups have the same speed, then the cells reserved for the trunk can be divided 
equally.
Setting up a Virtual
Circuit
To configure a circuit in the PathBuilder S330/S310, you must set up a virtual 
circuit between any two ports through the CTX. See “Configuring Virtual Circuits” 
in Chapter 4, for details about setting up virtual circuits.