07-09-2012 06:56 AM - edited 03-04-2019 04:54 PM
Hello everyone, I have a hub router at my data center serving approx. 90 spokes. While my infrastucture is implementing spoke-to-spoke tunnels for inter-branch communication, all my application servers are still behind the hub router at the data center. All exchange clients at the company are setup with the offline mode turned on which means, each and every single email is downloaded by the client. On a normal day this doesn't cause too much grief as we do have a 100 meg pipe out of the data centre however when someone returns after 2 weeks vacation and then start downloading their emails, it bogs down our bandwidth at the DC. We are an engineering firm therefore most my clients emails' contain large attachments. Just today I got an alert that the 100meg pipe had reached 70% of it's capacity.
So my question is this, is there a way I can implement some kind of qos policy on the router that will restrict bandwidth usage for exchange?
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07-09-2012 08:58 AM
its better that u limit the bandwidth close to the server then. i say at the ingress port of the exchange server. i dont know if 2900 supports it this way though.
access-list 130 permit tcp host [exchange ip] eq 25 any
access-list 130 permit tcp host [exchange ip] eq 110 any
class-map MAIL
match ip address 130
policy-map MAIL_LIMIT
class MAIL
police 20000000 exceed drop
exit
int Fx
service-policy input MAIL_LIMIT
this will limit all the EMAIL traffic (ONLY) from the server to 20mb.
Hope it Helps,
Soroush.
07-09-2012 07:05 AM
Hi rick,
generally its a Yes.
you can limit the bandwidth for certain applications with regards to server's ip address or service's tcp port, etc. but it depends on the equipment u r using, whats the router you have there?
how much bandwidth you have in mind for the exchange?
Soroush.
07-09-2012 07:15 AM
Hello Soroush, thanks for the reply.
I am using a Cisco 2951 ISR currently. I would say 20meg should be sufficient for exchange as I don't want it to affect my other mission critical apps.
07-09-2012 08:58 AM
its better that u limit the bandwidth close to the server then. i say at the ingress port of the exchange server. i dont know if 2900 supports it this way though.
access-list 130 permit tcp host [exchange ip] eq 25 any
access-list 130 permit tcp host [exchange ip] eq 110 any
class-map MAIL
match ip address 130
policy-map MAIL_LIMIT
class MAIL
police 20000000 exceed drop
exit
int Fx
service-policy input MAIL_LIMIT
this will limit all the EMAIL traffic (ONLY) from the server to 20mb.
Hope it Helps,
Soroush.
07-09-2012 10:34 AM
Exchange is actually plugged into a 3750. I'll apply the policy there. Thanks for your assitance. Much appreciated.
07-10-2012 11:52 AM
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Although policing your exchange at its source will keep it from taking using too much bandwidth, a more optimal solution would be QoS prioritization at your bottleneck. This so email can use bandwidth in such a way it isn't adverse to other traffic, but transfers as quickly as it can. Activation of FQ at the WAN egress might be the most simple and yet beneficial (even beyond just email). If your spokes have less than 100 Mbps, shaping for each might also be considered.
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