Qos commands, Access control lists – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 597

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QoS Commands

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QoS Commands

Quality of Service (QoS) technologies are intended to provide guaranteed

timely delivery of specific application data to a particular destination. In

contrast, standard IP-based networks are designed to provide best effort data

delivery service. Best effort service implies that the network delivers the data

in a timely fashion, although there is no guarantee. During times of

congestion, packets may be delayed, sent sporadically, or dropped. For typical

Internet applications, such as electronic mail and file transfer, a slight

degradation in service is acceptable and, in many cases, unnoticeable.
Conversely, any degradation of service has undesirable effects on applications

with strict timing requirements, such as voice or multimedia.
QoS is a means of providing consistent, predictable data delivery by

distinguishing between packets that have strict timing requirements from

those that are more tolerant of delay. Packets with strict timing requirements

are given special treatment in a QoS-capable network. To accomplish this, all

elements of the network must be QoS-capable. If one node is unable to meet

the necessary timing requirements, this creates a deficiency in the network

path and the performance of the entire packet flow is compromised.

Access Control Lists

The PowerConnect ACL feature allows classification of packets based upon

Layer 2 through Layer 4 header information. An Ethernet IPv6 packet is

distinguished from an IPv4 packet by its unique Ether-type value; thus, all

IPv4 and IPv6 classifiers include the Ether-type field.
Multiple ACLs per interface are supported. The ACLs can be combination of

Layer 2 and/or Layer 3/4 ACLs.
ACL assignment is appropriate for both physical ports and LAGs.

2CSPC4.XModular-SWUM200.book Page 597 Thursday, March 10, 2011 11:18 AM

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