10 acronyms and terms – H3C Technologies H3C Intelligent Management Center User Manual

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10 Acronyms and terms

ACL—Acronym for Access Control List, a set of custom rules that can be applied to network services or

hardware devices to control ports and network processes. QoSM uses IMC's ACL Management function

to determine match rules for network traffic classification.
AF—Acronym for Assured Forwarding, a network traffic behavior that provides assurance of delivery as

long as traffic does not exceed the subscribed rate. AF is one category of behavior settings that you can

specify for traffic classes in QoS. Assured Forwarding is detailed in the IETF's RFC 2597 and RFC 3260

specifications.
BE—Acronym for Best Effort, a network traffic behavior that effectively treats all inbound and outbound
packets equally (that is, no quality of service is applied). In QoSM, BE is a behavior that you can apply

to lower priority traffic.
Behavior—In QoSM, a set of parameters that collectively can be applied to a network service type (voice,

video, etc.) to optimize outbound traffic for your business.
BitTorrent—A peer-to-peer network architecture, developed by the company BitTorrent, for distributing

large amounts of data over the Internet. See also Peer-to-Peer.
Call Signaling—A layer of a network protocol standard for delivering VoIP (voice data) packets over a

network.
CAR—Acronym for Committed Access Rate, a feature in routers that limits the input or output transmission

rate on an interface based on certain matching criteria, such as incoming interface, IP precedence, QoS

group, or IP access list criteria. Routers that support CAR can be configured with certain transmit, drop,

set precedence, or set QoS group settings when traffic conforms to or exceeds the rate limit. QoSM
enables you to specify CAR as part of a deploy task that can be deployed to multiple devices supporting

a particular network service or set of services.
CBQ—Acronym for Class-Based Queuing, a network traffic management algorithm built into many

routers, allowing administrators to classify and prioritize traffic in a multilevel hierarchy based on
business requirements. In QoSM, the classifiers and behaviors enable administrators to implement CBQ

for their organizations.
CBS—Acronym for Committed Burst Size, a congestion control setting typically used in wide-area

networks connecting multiple local-area networks. A CBS specifies the maximum number of packets

transmittable during a specified interval.
CIR—Acronym for Committed Information Rate, the average rate (bits per second) at which the network

guarantees to transfer information units over a specific measurement interval. This interval is the quotient

of committed burst size divided by committed information rate (CBS/CIR).
Classifier—In QoSM, a set of criteria for identifying and categorizing particular types of network traffic,
for example, voice data or video. By classifying data types in QoSM, you can then specify network

behaviors relative to those data types to help optimize your business processes.
Deploy Task—In QoSM, an encapsulated QoS policy gathered from one device, which you can apply

(deploy) to other devices on your network. With deploy tasks, you can very quickly deploy quality of
service parameters to multiple devices to prioritize the different network services and optimize network

traffic flow according to your business priorities.
DiffServ—Short for Differentiated Services, a networking architecture for classifying and managing

network traffic and providing quality of service on IP networks.

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