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3 bandwidth management priorities, 7 over allotment of bandwidth – ZyXEL Communications 802.11g HomePlug AV ADSL2+ Gateway P-660HWP-Dx User Manual

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Chapter 15 Bandwidth Management

P-660HWP-Dx User’s Guide

39

15.6.2.2 Fairness-based Allotment of Unused and Unbudgeted Bandwidth

The following table shows the amount of bandwidth that each class gets.

Suppose that all of the classes except for the administration class need more bandwidth.

• Each class gets up to its budgeted bandwidth. The administration class only uses 1024

kbps of its budgeted 2048 kbps.

• The P-660HWP-Dx divides the total 3072 kbps total of unbudgeted and unused bandwidth

equally among the other classes. 1024 kbps extra goes to each so the other classes each get
a total of 3072 kbps.

15.6.3 Bandwidth Management Priorities

The following table describes the priorities that you can apply to traffic that the P-660HWP-
Dx forwards out through an interface.

15.7 Over Allotment of Bandwidth

You can set the bandwidth management speed for an interface higher than the interface’s
actual transmission speed. Higher priority traffic gets to use up to its allocated bandwidth,
even if it takes up all of the interface’s available bandwidth. This could stop lower priority
traffic from being sent. The following

is an example.

Table 88 Fairness-based Allotment of Unused and Unbudgeted Bandwidth Example

BANDWIDTH CLASSES AND ALLOTMENTS

Root Class: 10240 kbps

Administration: 1024 kbps

Sales: 3072 kbps

Marketing: 3072 kbps

Research: 3072 kbps

Table 89 Bandwidth Management Priorities

PRIORITY LEVELS: TRAFFIC WITH A HIGHER PRIORITY GETS THROUGH FASTER WHILE

TRAFFIC WITH A LOWER PRIORITY IS DROPPED IF THE NETWORK IS CONGESTED.

High

Typically used for voice traffic or video that is especially sensitive to jitter (jitter

is the variations in delay).

Mid

Typically used for “excellent effort” or better than best effort and would include

important business traffic that can tolerate some delay.

Low

This is typically used for non-critical “background” traffic such as bulk

transfers that are allowed but that should not affect other applications and

users.

Table 90 Over Allotment of Bandwidth Example

BANDWIDTH CLASSES, ALLOTMENTS

PRIORITIES

Actual outgoing bandwidth available on the interface: 1000 kbps

Root Class: 1500 kbps (same

as Speed setting)

VoIP traffic (Service = SIP): 500 Kbps

High

NetMeeting traffic (Service = H.323): 500 kbps

High

FTP (Service = FTP): 500 Kbps

Medium