11-09-2017 04:20 AM - edited 03-08-2019 12:40 PM
Hi Guys,
I have read the QOS section Odom's 200-125 book. It gave a good overview but I feel like I need a lot more information before I can implement some good QOS.
For example I have been able to mark some https traffic using an access list and class map (10 tcp any any eq 443) and a policy map on ingress of LAN interface. THe policy map marks the same traffic with DSCP AF41. I am seeing the hits on the access list. I set up another policy map on the egress of the WAN interface, same class map but with priority percent 50 command. I can't really tell if my traffic is getting shaped.
Can anyone suggest a good book or article that goes into more detail about QOS?
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11-10-2017 04:41 AM
11-09-2017 05:52 AM
11-09-2017 03:17 PM
Hi Joseph,
Thanks. I was hoping someone of your calibre might contribute to my discussion. I am studying ICND1 but I am already getting obsessed with QOS lol. I am trying not get sidetracked with it but it is so fascinating in terms of what you can achieve with it. I have found this Cisco document which I think is going to help. I am not a big fan of reading PDF's but I can print it out.
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/solutions/Enterprise/WAN_and_MAN/QoS_SRND/QoS-SRND-Book.pdf
11-10-2017 04:41 AM
11-10-2017 06:46 AM
Thanks Joseph for that insight into your approach. It does illustrate that QOS is not the be all and end all of traffic flow.
The way you broke that down kind of reminds me of another piece of advice someone gave me in relation to 'order of processing'.. The discussion came about when I was trying to get traffic across an IPSEC VPN using an access list while at the same time allow the same subnet to NAT. In the end I had to deny the VPN bound traffic out of the NAT access list.
A different issue but similar in the sense where a broader understanding is required rather than just knowing access lists and tinkering with other individual components.
I guess this is why they teach TCP before they teach QOS :) MTU is also something I would love to become more proficient at, rather than just knowing the ping (no fragment) test.
Thanks so much for your help and passing on your knowledge.
11-10-2017 08:17 AM
". . . where a broader understanding is required . . . "exactly!
"I guess this is why they teach TCP . . ." yup, but there too, most teaching of TCP doesn't go into all the different "flavors" nor spend much time on the bug-a-boo of TCP, its flow rate control.
QoS makes sense when you understand the context of the traffic environment.
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