3 delay bound, 4 strict priority and best effort – Planet Technology Planet Intelligent Gigabit Ethernet Stackable/Routing Switch WGSW-2402A User Manual

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In the fourth profile mode, all queues are served using a WFQ service discipline.

5.15.1.3 Delay Bound

In the absence of a sophisticated QoS server and signaling protocol, the Switch may not know the mix

of incoming traffic ahead of time. To cope with this uncertainty, the delay assurance algorithm

dynamically adjusts its scheduling and dropping criteria, guided by the queue occupancies and the due

dates of their head-of-line (HOL) frames. As a result, we assure latency bounds for all admitted frames

with high confidence, even in the presence of system-wide congestion. The algorithm identifies

misbehaving classes and intelligently discards frames at no detriment to well-behaved classes. The

algorithm also differentiates between high-drop and low-drop traffic with a weighted random early drop

(WRED) approach. Random early dropping prevents congestion by randomly dropping a percentage of

high-drop frames even before the Switch’s buffers are completely full, while still largely sparing

low-drop frames. This allows high-drop frames to be discarded early, as a sacrifice for future low-drop

frames. Finally, the delay bound algorithm also achieves bandwidth partitioning among classes.

5.15.1.4 Strict Priority and Best Effort

When strict priority is part of the scheduling algorithm, if a queue has even one frame to transmit, it

goes first. Two of our four QoS configurations include strict priority queues. The goal is for strict

priority classes to be used for IETF expedited forwarding (EF), where performance guarantees are

required. As we have indicated, it is important that strict priority traffic be either policed or implicitly

bounded, so as to keep from harming other traffic classes.

When best effort is part of the scheduling algorithm, a queue only receives bandwidth when none of the

other classes have any traffic to offer. Two of four QoS profile modes include best effort queues. The

goal is for best effort classes to be used for non-essential traffic, because we provide no assurances

about best effort performance. However, in a typical network setting, much best effort traffic will indeed

be transmitted, and with an adequate degree of expediency.

Because we do not provide any delay assurances for best effort traffic, we do not enforce latency by

dropping best effort traffic. Furthermore, because we assume that strict priority traffic is carefully

controlled before entering the Switch, we do not enforce a fair bandwidth partition by dropping strict

priority traffic. To summarize, dropping to enforce bandwidth or delay does not apply to strict priority or

best effort queues. The Switch only drop frames from best effort and strict priority queues when global

buffer resources become scarce.

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