[Contents]
[Prev]
[Next]
[Index]
[Report an Error]
Default DHCP Mappings
Table 1 shows
the mapping of DiffServ service class meanings (aliases) to DSCPs.
Table 1: Default
DSCP Mappings
|
DiffServ Service Class Alias
|
IPv4 and IPv6 DSCP Mapping
|
|
ef
|
101110
|
|
af11
|
001010
|
|
af12
|
001100
|
|
af13
|
001110
|
|
af21
|
010010
|
|
af22
|
010100
|
|
af23
|
010110
|
|
af31
|
011010
|
|
af32
|
011100
|
|
af33
|
011110
|
|
af41
|
100010
|
|
af42
|
100100
|
|
af43
|
100110
|
|
be
|
000000
|
|
cs1
|
001000
|
|
cs2
|
010000
|
|
cs3
|
011000
|
|
cs4
|
100000
|
|
cs5
|
101000
|
|
nc1/cs6
|
110000
|
|
nc2/cs7
|
111000
|
None of the aliases are established
by DiffServ specifications. The aliases are well-known only through
usage. For example, it is widely accepted that the alias for DSCP 101110 is ef (expedited forwarding). The 21 well-known
DSCPs establish 5 DiffServ service classes:
-
Best-effort (be)—The
router does not apply any special CoS handling to packets with 000000 in the DiffServ field, a backward compatibility feature.
There is usually a high probability that these packets will be dropped
under congested network conditions.
-
Assured forwarding (af)—The
router offers a high level of assurance that the packets are delivered
as long as the packet flow from the customer stays within a certain
service profile (the service provider defines the values). The router
accepts excess traffic, but applies a random early discard (RED) drop
profile to decide if the excess packets should be dropped and not
forwarded. Three drop probabilities (low, medium, and high) are defined
for this service class.
-
Expedited forwarding (ef)—The
router delivers assured bandwidth, low loss, low delay, and low delay
variation (jitter) end-to-end for packets in this service class. Routers
accept excess traffic in this class, but in contrast to assured forwarding,
out-of-profile expedited-forwarding packets can be forwarded out of
sequence or dropped.
-
Conversational services (cs)—The router delivers assured (usually low) bandwidth with low
delay and jitter for packets in this service class. Packets can be
dropped, but never delivered out of sequence. Packetized voice is
a good example of a conversational service.
-
Network control (nc)—The
router delivers packets in this service class with a low priority
(these packets are not delay-sensitive). Typically, these packets
represent routing protocol hello or keepalive messages and loss of
these packets jeopardizes proper network operation, so delay is preferable
to discard.
Related Topics
[Contents]
[Prev]
[Next]
[Index]
[Report an Error]