cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
962
Views
5
Helpful
1
Replies

QOS priority police and remaining bandwidth

jbaros
Level 1
Level 1

Hello Team,

I would like to better understand of behavior of my QoS. I have configured class with priority, and then with police. Lower classes are configured with "bandwidth remaining percent" command.

policy-map TRAFFIC-OUT-Gi0/0.7
 class OUT-VOICE
  priority
  police 8608000 1076000 1076000 conform-action set-dscp-transmit ef exceed-action drop
 class OUT-VIDEO
  bandwidth remaining percent 20
  police 6008000 751000 751000 conform-action transmit  exceed-action drop
  queue-limit 256 packets
 class OUT-DATA
  bandwidth remaining percent 79
   service-policy OUT-D1-Gi0/0.7

My question is, will share class OUT-VOICE its free bandwidth if OUT-DATA class is fully utilized? Or OUT-VOICE bandwidth is not shareable in this configuration?
I have issues, data class is dropping too many packet even the link is not fully utilized.

 

Thanks for help.

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

Joseph W. Doherty
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame
"My question is, will share class OUT-VOICE its free bandwidth if OUT-DATA class is fully utilized?"

I believe it should.

"I have issues, data class is dropping too many packet even the link is not fully utilized."

Often that's a symptom of bursty traffic, i.e. the available bandwidth is overrun during a microburst, drops happens, TCP goes into CA. (See classic TCP saw tooth bandwidth graphs.)

Increasing your class OUT-DATA buffers might reduce drops.

View solution in original post

1 Reply 1

Joseph W. Doherty
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame
"My question is, will share class OUT-VOICE its free bandwidth if OUT-DATA class is fully utilized?"

I believe it should.

"I have issues, data class is dropping too many packet even the link is not fully utilized."

Often that's a symptom of bursty traffic, i.e. the available bandwidth is overrun during a microburst, drops happens, TCP goes into CA. (See classic TCP saw tooth bandwidth graphs.)

Increasing your class OUT-DATA buffers might reduce drops.
Getting Started

Find answers to your questions by entering keywords or phrases in the Search bar above. New here? Use these resources to familiarize yourself with the community:

Review Cisco Networking products for a $25 gift card