HP 6120XG HP ProCurve Series 6120 Blade Switches Advanced Traffic Management G - Page 179

Introduction, prioritization, less important traffic can consume network bandwidth

Page 179 highlights

Quality of Service (QoS): Managing Bandwidth More Effectively Introduction Introduction QoS Feature Default UDP/TCP Priority Disabled IP-Device Priority Disabled IP Type-of-Service Priority Disabled LAN Protocol Priority Disabled VLAN-ID Priority Disabled Source-Port Priority Disabled DSCP Policy Table Various Queue Configuration 4 Queues Menu CLI Web page 5-15 Refer to the Online Help. page 5-22 " page 5-26 " page 5-38 " page 5-41 " page 5-46 " page 5-51 " page 5-63 " As the term suggests, network policy refers to the network-wide controls you can implement to: ■ Ensure uniform and efficient traffic handling throughout your network, while keeping the most important traffic moving at an acceptable speed, regardless of current bandwidth usage. ■ Exercise control over the priority settings of inbound traffic arriving in and travelling through your network. Adding bandwidth is often a good idea, but it is not always feasible and does not completely eliminate the potential for network congestion. There will always be points in the network where multiple traffic streams merge or where network links will change speed and capacity. The impact and number of these congestion points will increase over time as more applications and devices are added to the network. When (not if) network congestion occurs, it is important to move traffic on the basis of relative importance. However, without Quality of Service (QoS) prioritization, less important traffic can consume network bandwidth and slow down or halt the delivery of more important traffic. That is, without QoS, most traffic received by the switch is forwarded with the same priority it had upon entering the switch. In many cases, such traffic is "normal" priority and competes for bandwidth with all other normal-priority traffic, regardless of its relative importance to your organization's mission. This section gives an overview of QoS operation and benefits, and describes how to configure QoS in the console interface. 5-3

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5-3
Quality of Service (QoS): Managing Bandwidth More Effectively
Introduction
Introduction
As the term suggests,
network policy
refers to the network-wide controls you
can implement to:
Ensure uniform and efficient traffic handling throughout your network,
while keeping the most important traffic moving at an acceptable speed,
regardless of current bandwidth usage.
Exercise control over the priority settings of inbound traffic arriving in
and travelling through your network.
Adding bandwidth is often a good idea, but it is not always feasible and does
not completely eliminate the potential for network congestion. There will
always be points in the network where multiple traffic streams merge or where
network links will change speed and capacity. The impact and number of these
congestion points will increase over time as more applications and devices
are added to the network.
When (not
if
) network congestion occurs, it is important to move traffic on
the basis of relative importance. However, without
Quality of Service
(QoS)
prioritization, less important traffic can consume network bandwidth and
slow down or halt the delivery of more important traffic. That is, without QoS,
most traffic received by the switch is forwarded with the same priority it had
upon entering the switch. In many cases, such traffic is “normal” priority and
competes for bandwidth with all other normal-priority traffic, regardless of
its relative importance to your organization’s mission.
This section gives an overview of QoS operation and benefits, and describes
how to configure QoS in the console interface.
QoS Feature
Default
Menu
CLI
Web
UDP/TCP Priority
Disabled
page 5-15
Refer to the Online Help.
IP-Device Priority
Disabled
page 5-22
IP Type-of-Service Priority
Disabled
page 5-26
LAN Protocol Priority
Disabled
page 5-38
VLAN-ID Priority
Disabled
page 5-41
Source-Port Priority
Disabled
page 5-46
DSCP Policy Table
Various
page 5-51
Queue Configuration
4 Queues
page 5-63