R.2.4 vlan-based layer 2 qos – Comtech EF Data CDM-625A User Manual

Page 727

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CDM-625A Advanced Satellite Modem

MN-CDM625A

Appendix R

Revision 3

R–5

Port

L2 QoS

Priority

Input

Data Rate

QoS Output

Data Rate

Remaining Data

Rate* (After Serving

the Priority Queue)

Output Data Rate

4

4

500 Kbps

500 Kbps

2500 Kbps

500 x (2.5/3) = 417 Kbps

3

3

800 Kbps

800 Kbps

1700 Kbps

800 x (2.5/3) = 667 Kbps

2

2

2 Mbps

1700 Kbps

0 Kbps

1700 x (2.5 /3) = 1416 Kbps

1

1

2 Mbps

0 Kbps

0 Kbps

0 Kbps

Total ►

5.3 Mbps

3 Mbps

0 Kbps

2.5 Mbps

*After Priority 4, even though the actual modem TX data rate is 2500 kbps, the QoS

leftover data rate is still 2500 kbps since QoS bandwidth is 3000 kbps.

R.2.4

VLAN-based Layer 2 QoS

When selecting VLAN-based Layer 2 QoS, the priority field is extracted from the 802.1q VLAN tag

as shown in Figure R-1. The VLAN tag priority field is 3 bits, so the 802.1q protocol supports

eight priorities, from 0 to 7. However, because Layer 2 QoS has only four priorities as mentioned

previously, as shown in Table R-2 these eight VLAN priorities are automatically mapped to four

internal priories.

Dest MAC

6 bytes

SRC MAC

6 bytes

Data

FCS

4 bytes

Type(0x8100)

2 bytes

Priority

3bits

CFI

1 bit

VLANid

12 bits

VLAN Tag

Figure R-1. IEEE 802.1q VLAN priority

Table R-2. 802.1q to Layer 2 QoS Priority Conversion

802.1q VLAN Priority Field

Layer 2 QoS Priority

7 (b111)

Priority 4

6 (b110)
5 (b101)

Priority 3

4 (b100)
3 (b011)

Priority 2

2 (b010)
1 (b001)

Priority 1

0 (b000)

Even though it is not necessary to configure multiple ports with VLANs, the VLAN QoS will not

look in the port information when classifying the packets into queue.

Similar to the Port-based scheduler, VLAN-based QoS also observes strict priority-based

scheduling. Should overdriving of VLAN priority traffic occur, the packet will be dropped and

drop stats will be incremented against that port.

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