Traffic shaping – H3C Technologies H3C SR8800 User Manual

Page 33

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Modifying the IP precedence of the packets whose evaluation result is “conforming” and

forwarding them

Modifying the IP precedence of the packets whose evaluation result is “conforming” and delivering
them into the next-level Traffic policing

Entering the next-level policing (you can set multiple traffic policing levels with each level focusing
on specific objects)

Traffic shaping

Traffic shaping limits the outbound traffic rate by buffering exceeding traffic. You can use traffic shaping

to adapt the traffic output rate on a device to the input traffic rate of its connected device to avoid packet

loss.
The difference between traffic policing and GTS is that packets to be dropped in traffic policing are

cached in a buffer or queue in GTS, as shown in

Figure 8

. When the token bucket has enough tokens,

these cached packets are sent at an even rate. Traffic shaping may result in an additional delay, but

traffic policing does not.

Figure 8 GTS

For example, in

Figure 9

, Router B performs traffic policing on packets from Router A and drops packets

exceeding the limit. To avoid packet loss, you can perform traffic shaping on the outgoing interface of

Router A so packets exceeding the limit are cached in Router A. Once resources are released, traffic
shaping takes out the cached packets and sends them out.

Figure 9 GTS application

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