Quality of service (qos), Monitoring – Avaya C360 User Manual

Page 23

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C360 Features and Benefits

Issue 1 July 2006

23

Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) provides flexible administrative
control over authentication and authorization processes. Refer to

RADIUS

on page 80 for

further information.

SNMP v3 adds security features to the SNMP v1 and SNMP v2c feature set. Refer to

SNMPv3

on page 75 for further information.

SSH enables establishing a remote session over a secured tunnel, also called a remote
shell. Refer to

Establishing an SSH Connection

on page 66 for further information.

MAC Security is intended to filter incoming frames (from the line) with an unauthorized
source MAC address (SA). Refer to

MAC Security

on page 132 for further information.

Quality of Service (QoS)

Per-port 802.1p marking for untagged traffic ensures that time-sensitive packets receive
the appropriate priority. Refer to

Priority

on page 114 for further information.

Four egress queues on all switch ports.

- You can configure these queues with either the WRR (Weighted Round Robin)

scheduling algorithm or the strict priority scheduling algorithm.

802.1p and DSCP mapping. Refer to

Policy Configuration Overview

on page 180 for

further information.

Classification of traffic per L3/L4 attributes on routed traffic only (classification based on
information in the IP and TCP/UDP headers)

802.1p QoS marking based on packet classification for high-performance quality of service
at the network edge, allowing for differentiated service levels for different types of network
traffic and for prioritizing mission-critical traffic in the network. This applies to routed traffic
only.

Monitoring

Front panel LEDs that provide at-a-glance port and switch status. Refer to

Avaya C360

Front and Rear Panels

on page 29 for further information.

Port mirroring lets you transparently mirror traffic from one source port to a destination port
to monitor traffic. Refer to

Port Mirroring

on page 144 for further information.

Four groups (history, statistics, alarms, and events) of embedded remote monitoring
(RMON) agents for network monitoring and traffic analysis. Refer to

RMON

on page 141

for further information.

Syslog facility for logging system messages about events, errors and other important
information. Refer to

System Logging

on page 104 for further information.

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