Hi,
1. some traffic originated on RE is placed in Q3 while other in Q0.
This can't be changed.
2. Do you try to apply RED (drop profile)on Q0? This can help, by
signaling to havy speaker to reduce TCP window.
3. If RED do not help, then you can try put best effort traffic into
Hi Guys,
I was hoping to use an egress filter to make sure BGP traffic got top
priority. The issue that occurred is that we accepted a flood of large
messages from Hotmail, which was alright on the inbound because the
Internet acted as speed buffer. However, when we went to deliver them
it saturat
Hi All,
It's worth pointing out that there is no implicit link between Q0 and
a particular scheduler or behaviour. If you want to use Q0 for
control traffic, then do that. Just make sure that all non-control
traffic gets put into a different queue. That's not particularly
difficult if you put a
Alex wrote:
> Jason,
> Locally originated BGP traffic is classified into Q0 by default (except BGP
> retransmissions)
> http://www.juniper.net/techpubs/software/junos/junos82/swconfig82-cos/html/cos-hardware4.html#1197876
> --and AFAIK, it is impossible to override this behaviour. So, in an essenc
bandwidth to
BGP traffic _through_ the router but not to locally-originated BGP traffic.
Rgds
Alex
- Original Message -
From: "Jason J. W. Williams" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Saturday, April 21, 2007 1:26 AM
Subject: [j-nsp] Using QoS to ensure BGP bandwidth
> H
Hello,
I've been investigating using QoS to ensure BGP traffic out of our
router to the peer gets transmitted even when the line is at full
saturation. I was going to use a firewall filter to assign all BGP to
a queue with strict-high priority, however it appears that
network-control traffic is as
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