D-Link DES-3326SRM Product Manual - Page 76

Quality of Service Configuration, , Con QoS Output Scheduling, Con p User Priority

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D-Link DES-3326S Layer 3 Switch Chapter 10 Quality of Service Configuration Configure QoS Output Scheduling Configure 802.1p User Priority Configure Default Priority Configure Bandwidth The DES-3326S switch supports 802.1p priority queuing. The switch has 4 priority queues. These priority queues are numbered from 0 (Class 0) - the lowest priority queue - to 3 (Class 3) - the highest priority queue. The eight priority queues specified in IEEE 802.1p (p0 to p7) are mapped to the switch's priority queues as follows: p1 and p2 are assigned to the switch's Class 0 queue. p0 and p3 are assigned to the switch's Class 1 queue. p4 and p5 are assigned to the switch's Class 2 queue. p6 and p7 are assigned to the switch's Class 3 queue. Priority scheduling is implemented using two types of methods, strict priority and round-robin priority. If no changes are made to the QoS priority scheduling settings the method used is strict priority. For strict priority-based scheduling, packets residing in the higher priority queues are transmitted first. Only when these queues are empty, are packets of lower priority allowed to be transmitted. Higher priority packets always receive preference regardless of the amount of lower priority packets in the buffer and regardless of the time elapsed since any lower priority packets have been transmitted. By default the switch is configured to empty the buffer using strict priority. NOTICE: The default QoS scheduling arrangement is a strict priority schedule. To customize scheduling to set up round-robin queue clearing, the MAX. Latency and MAX. Packets values need to be changed. To use implement round-robin (weighted) priority, the switch's four priority queues can be configured to reduce the buffer in a round-robin fashion - beginning with the highest priority queue, and proceeding to the lowest priority queue before returning to the highest priority queue. The weighted-priority based scheduling alleviates the main disadvantage of strict priority-based scheduling − in that lower priority queues get starved of bandwidth − by providing a minimum bandwidth to all queues for transmission. This is accomplished by configuring the maximum number of packets allowed to be transmitted from a given priority queue and the maximum amount of time a given priority queue will have to wait before being allowed to transmit its accumulated packets. This establishes a Class of Service (CoS) for each of the switch's four hardware priority queues. The possible range for maximum packets is: 0 to 255 packets. The possible range for maximum latency is: 0 to 255 (in increments of 16 microseconds each). Remember that the DES-3326S has four priority queues (and thus four Classes of Service) for each port on the switc To configure QoS settings, open the Configure QoS subdirectory in the Advanced Setup folder, and the click on the link for the QoS setting you want to configure. h. 66

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D-Link DES-3326S Layer 3 Switch
Chapter 10
Quality of Service Configuration
Configure QoS Output Scheduling
Configure 802.1p User Priority
Configure Default Priority
Configure Bandwidth
The DES-3326S switch supports 802.1p priority queuing.
The switch has 4 priority queues. These priority queues are
numbered from 0 (Class 0) — the lowest priority queue — to 3 (Class 3) — the highest priority queue. The eight priority
queues specified in IEEE 802.1p (p0 to p7) are mapped to the switch’s priority queues as follows:
p1 and p2 are assigned to the switch’s Class 0 queue.
p0 and p3 are assigned to the switch’s Class 1 queue.
p4 and p5 are assigned to the switch’s Class 2 queue.
p6 and p7 are assigned to the switch’s Class 3 queue.
Priority scheduling is implemented using two types of methods, strict priority and round-robin priority. If no changes are made
to the QoS priority scheduling settings the method used is strict priority.
For strict priority-based scheduling, packets residing in the higher priority queues are transmitted first.
Only when these
queues are empty, are packets of lower priority allowed to be transmitted. Higher priority packets always receive preference
regardless of the amount of lower priority packets in the buffer and regardless of the time elapsed since any lower priority
packets have been transmitted. By default the switch is configured to empty the buffer using strict priority.
NOTICE:
The default QoS scheduling arrangement is a strict priority schedule. To
customize scheduling to set up round-robin queue clearing, the MAX. Latency and
MAX. Packets values need to be changed.
To use implement round-robin (weighted) priority, the switch’s four priority queues can be configured to reduce the buffer in a
round-robin fashion - beginning with the highest priority queue, and proceeding to the lowest priority queue before returning to
the highest priority queue.
The weighted-priority based scheduling alleviates the main disadvantage of strict priority-based scheduling
in that lower
priority queues get starved of bandwidth
by providing a minimum bandwidth to all queues for transmission.
This is
accomplished by configuring the maximum number of packets allowed to be transmitted from a given priority queue and the
maximum amount of time a given priority queue will have to wait before being allowed to transmit its accumulated packets.
This establishes a Class of Service (CoS) for each of the switch’s four hardware priority queues.
The possible range for maximum packets is: 0 to 255 packets.
The possible range for maximum latency is: 0 to 255 (in increments of 16 microseconds each).
Remember that the DES-3326S has four priority queues (and thus four Classes of Service) for each port on the switc
To configure QoS settings, open the
Configure QoS
subdirectory in the
Advanced Setup
folder, and the click on the link for
the QoS setting you want to configure. h.
66