Congestion management technology comparison, Line rate – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual

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Match packets with classification rules in a class in the configuration order.

Congestion management technology comparison

Table 44 Congestion management technology comparison

Type Number of

queues

Advantages

Disadvantages

FIFO

1

No need to configure, easy to use

Easy to operate, low delay

All packets are treated equally. The

available bandwidth, delay and
drop probability are determined by

the arrival order of packets.

No restriction on the uncooperative
data sources (flows without any flow

control mechanism, UDP for

example), resulting in bandwidth loss

of cooperative data sources such as
TCP.

No delay guarantee for
time-sensitive real-time applications,

such as VoIP

CBQ

Configurable
(0 to 64)

Flexible traffic classification based on

various rules and differentiated queue
scheduling mechanisms for expedited

forwarding (EF), assured forwarding

(AF) and best-effort (BE) services.

Highly precise bandwidth guarantee

and queue scheduling on the basis of

AF service weights for various AF

services

Absolutely preferential queue

scheduling for the EF service to meet
the delay requirement of real-time

data; overcoming the disadvantage of

PQ that some low-priority queues are

not serviced by restricting the
high-priority traffic.

WFQ scheduling for best-effort traffic

(the default class).

The system overheads are large.

Line rate

Line rate also uses token buckets to evaluate traffic specifications for traffic control. The line rate of a
physical interface specifies the maximum rate for forwarding packets (including critical packets).

Compared with traffic policing, line rate can only limit traffic rate on a physical interface. To limit the rate

of all the packets on an interface as a whole, using line rate is easier.

NOTE:

For more information about token buckets, see "

Traffic evaluation and token buckets

."

With line rate configured on an interface, all packets to be sent through the interface are firstly handled

by the token bucket at line rate. If the token bucket has enough tokens, packets can be forwarded;

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