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Deploying Quality of Service Technologies © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 Agenda • • • • • © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. QoS Metrics QoS Architectures QoS Design Guidelines A QoS Scenario Summary 2 QoS Metrics What are we trying to control? • Four metrics are used to describe a packet’s transmission through a network – Bandwidth, Delay, Jitter, and Loss • Using a pipe analogy, then for each packet: Bandwidth is the perceived width of the pipe Delay is the perceived length of the pipe Jitter is the perceived variation in the length of the pipe Bandwidth Loss is the perceived leakiness if the pipe A © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. The path as perceived by a packet! B Delay 3 QoS Metrics – Bandwidth The amount of bandwidth available to a packet is affected by: The slowest link found in the transmission path The amount of congestion experienced at each hop – TCP slow-start and windowing The forwarding speed of the devices in the path The queuing priority given to the packet flow 100 Mb/s 2Mb/s 10 Mb/s 2 Mb/s Maximum Bandwidth © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 4 QoS Metrics – Delay The amount of delay experienced by a packet is the sum of the: Fixed Propagation Delays Bounded by the speed of light and the path distance Fixed Serialization Delays The time required to physically place a packet onto a transmission medium Variable Switching Delays The time required by each forwarding engine to resolve the next-hop address and egress interface for a packet Variable Queuing Delays The time required by each switching engine to queue a packet for transmission © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 5 QoS Metrics – Jitter The amount of Jitter experienced by a packet is affected by: ~214ms Serialization Serialization delays on low-speed interfaces Delay for a 1500-byte packet at 56Kb/s Variations in queue-depth due to congestion Variations in queue cycle-times induced by the service architectures – First-Come, First-Served, for example 60B every 20ms Voice 1500 Bytes of Data Voice 60B every 214ms Voice 1500 Bytes of Data Voice 10 Mbps Ethernet 60B every 214ms Voice 1500 Bytes of Data Voice 10 Mbps Ethernet 56 Kbps WAN © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 QoS Metrics – Loss The amount of loss experienced by a packet flow is affected by: Buffer exhaustion due to congestion caused by oversubscription or rate-decoupling Intentional packet drops due to congestion control mechanism such as Random Early Discard DS-3 GE GE Oversubscribed © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. GE Buffer Exhaustion 7 QoS Architectures © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 8 QoS Implementation Models No State Aggregated State Per-Flow State 1. Best Effort 2. IntServ/RSVP 3. DiffServ 4. RSVP+DiffServ+MPLS © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 9 Integrated Services (IntServ) The Integrated Services (IntServ) model builds upon Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Reservations are made per simplex flow Applications request reservations for network resources which are granted or denied based on resource availability Senders specify the resource requirements via a PATH message that is routed to the receiver Receivers reserve the resources with a RESV message that follows the reverse path RESV Sender Receiver PATH © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 10 IntServ – Components The Integrated Services Model can be divided into two parts – the Control and Data Planes Control Plane Routing Selection Admission Control Reservation Setup Reservation Table Data Plane Flow Identification © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Packet Scheduler 11 IntServ – Components Control Plane Route Selection – Identifies the route to follow for the reservation (typically provided by the IGP processes) Reservation Setup – Installs the reservation state along the selected path Admission Control – Ensures that resources are available before allowing a reservation Data Plane Flow Identification – Identifies the packets that belong to a given reservation (using the packet’s 5-Tuple) Packet Scheduling – Enforces the reservations by queuing and scheduling packets for transmission © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 IntServ – Service Models Applications using IntServ can request two basic service-types: Guaranteed Service Provides guaranteed bandwidth and queuing delays end-toend, similar to a virtual-circuit Applications can expect hard-bounded bandwidth and delay Controlled-Load Service Provides a Better-than-Best-Effort service, similar to a lightly-loaded network of the required bandwidth Applications can expect little to zero packet loss, and little to zero queuing delay These services are mapped into policies that are applied via CB-WFQ, LLQ, or MDRR © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 13 IntServ – Scaling Issues IntServ routers need to examine every packet to identify and classify the microflows using the 5-tuple IntServ routers must maintain a token-bucket per microflow Guaranteed Service requires the creation of a queue for each microflow Data structures must be created and maintained for each reservation © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 14 Differentiated Services (DiffServ) The DiffServ Model specifies an approach that offers a service better than Best-Effort and more scalable than IntServ Traffic is classified into one of five forwarding classes at the edge of a DiffServ network Forwarding classes are encoded in the Differentiated Services Codepoint (DSCP) field of each packet’s IP header DiffServ routers apply pre-provisioned Per-Hop Behaviors (PHBs) to packets according to the encoded forwarding class 5 © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 4 3 2 1 5 4 3 2 1 15 DiffServ – Compared to IntServ DiffServ allocates resources to aggregated rather than to individual flows DiffServ moves the classification, policing, and marking functions to the boundary nodes – the core simply forwards based on aggregate class DiffServ defines Per-Hop forwarding behaviors, not end-to-end services DiffServ guarantees are based on provisioning, not reservations The DiffServ focus is on individual domains, rather than end-to-end deployments © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 16 DiffSrv – The DS Field (RFC 2474) DS field DSCP CU The DS field is composed of the 6 high-order bits of the IP ToS field The DS field is functionally similar to the IPv4 TOS and IPv6 Traffic Class fields The DS field is divided into three pools: nnnnn0 – Standards Use nnnn11 – Experimental / Local Use nnnn01 – Experimental / Local Use, possible Standards Use Class Selector Codepoints occupy the high-order bits (nnn000) and map to the IPv4 Precedence bits © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 17 DiffSrv – Forwarding Classes The DS Field can encode: Eight Class Selector Codepoints compatible with legacy systems (CS0-7) An Expedited Forwarding (EF) Class Four Assured Forwarding Classes, each with three Drop Precedence (AFxy, where x=1-4, and y=1-3) Packets in a higher AF Classes have a higher transmit priority Packets with a higher Drop Precedence are more likely to be dropped © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. DSCP Codepoint 000000 CS0 (DE) 001000 CS1 001010 AF11 001100 AF12 001110 AF13 010000 CS2 010010 AF21 010100 AF22 010110 AF23 011000 CS3 011010 AF31 011100 AF32 011110 AF33 100000 CS4 100010 AF41 100100 AF42 100110 AF43 101000 CS5 101110 EF 110000 CS6 111000 CS7 18 DiffServ – Per-Hop Behaviours A Per-Hop Behaviour (PHB) is an observable forwarding behaviour of a DS node applied to all packets with the same DSCP PHBs do NOT mandate any specific implementation mechanisms The EF PHB should provide a low-loss, low-delay, lowjitter, assured bandwidth service The AF PHBs should provide increasing levels or service (higher bandwidth) for increasing AF levels The Default PHB (CS0) should be equivalent to BestEffort Service Packets within a given PHB should not be re-ordered © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 19 DiffServ – Boundary Nodes DiffServ Boundary Nodes are responsible for classifying and conditioning packets as they enter a given DiffServ Domain Conditioning Remarker Classification Classifier Marker Meter Shaper Dropper Classifier Marker Meter Remarker Shaper Dropper © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Examine each packet and assign a Forwarding Class Set the DS Field to match the Forwarding Class Measure the traffic flow and compare it to the traffic profile Remark (lower) the DS Field for out-of-profile traffic Shape the traffic to match the traffic profile Drop out of profile traffic 20 DiffServ – Summary DiffServ Domain Classification / Conditioning PHB LLQ/WRED Premium Gold © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Silver Bronze 21 The Trouble with DiffServ As currently formulated, DiffServ is strong on simplicity and weak on guarantees Virtual wire using EF is OK, but how much can be deployed? DiffServ has no topology-aware admission control mechanism © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 22 RSVP-DiffServ Integration The best of both worlds – Aggregated RSVP integrated with DiffServ No State Aggregated State Per-Flow State RSVP + DiffServ Best Effort DiffServ Aggregated State Firm Guarantees Admission Control IntServ But – given the presence of a DiffServ domain in a network, how do we support RSVP End-to-End? © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 23 RSVP-DiffServ Integration – How? Routers at edge of a DS cloud perform microflow classification, policing, and marking • Guaranteed Load set to the EF, Controlled load set to AFx, and Best Effort set to CS0 • Service Model to Forwarding Class mapping is arbitrary RSVP signaling is used in both the IntServ and DiffServ regions for admission control The DiffServ core makes and manages aggregate reservations for the DS Forwarding Classes based on the RSVP microflow reservations The core then schedules and forwards packets based only on the DS Field © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 24 RSVP-DiffServ Integration Border Routers implement per-flow classification, policing, and marking The DiffServ region aggregates the flows into DS Forwarding Classes DiffServ Region RSVP Signaling is propagated End-to End The IntServ regions contain Guaranteed or Controlled Load Microflows © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 25 RSVP-DiffServ Integration – Summary The forwarding plane is still DiffServ We now make a small number of aggregated reservations from ingress to egress Microflow RSVP messages are carried across the DiffServ cloud Aggregate reservations are dynamically adjusted to cover all microflows RSVP flow-classifiers and per-flow queues are eliminated in the core Scalability is improved – only the RSVP flow states are necessary – Tested to 10K flows © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 26 MPLS Traffic Engineering – A Summary Uses Constraint-based routing for path selection – IS-IS or CSPF MPLS tunnels are setup via RSVP Utilizes DiffServ-aware forwarding based on MPLS EXP bits Traffic can be managed based on both bandwidth or administrative metrics © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 27 QoS Design Guidelines © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 28 QoS Design Guidelines 1. Investigate and understand application requirements and behaviors 2. Group applications or users together based on their QoS needs – bandwidth, latency, jitter, and packet loss 3. Use the proper QoS tools at the correct places in the network to meet the needs of these groups © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 29 QoS Requirements for Applications Voice FTP ERP and MissionCritical Low to Moderate Moderate to High Varies Loss Sensitivity Low High Moderate to High Delay Sensitive High Low Low to Moderate Jitter Sensitive High Low Varies Bandwidth Traffic should be grouped into classes that have similar QoS requirements © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 30 The Cisco QoS Architecture Classification Queuing Policing Marking Identify and Split Traffic into Different Classes Discard Misbehaving Traffic to Maintain Network Integrity © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Mark Traffic According to Behavior and Business Policies Prioritize, Protect and Isolate Traffic Based on Markings Shaping Control Bursts and Conform Traffic 31 Classification – Defining a Class Applications Single users • MAC address • IP address • TCP/UDP Port number • 5-Tuples • URLs Departments, customers • IP Subnet • Ingress Interface Traffic Classes are usually mapped to the IP Precedence or DiffServ DS Fields to control Queuing and Congestion Management Routines © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 32 Classification – NBAR My Application Is too Slow! Network Based Application Recognition (NBAR) can: Analyze application traffic patterns in real time Classify packets based on: • L4-L7 protocols which dynamically assign TCP/UDP ports • HTTP Traffic by URL or MIME Provides per-interface, per-protocol, bidirectional statistics Link Utilization Citrix Netshow Oracle FTP HTTP 25% 15% 10% 30% 20% © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Mark Citrix Real-Time as GOLD Service and Police FTP Guarantee Bandwidth for Citrix! 33 Classification – Rules Classify Packets as close to the network edge as possible Classify locally generated voice packets using ‘dialpeer’ commands Use Class-Maps or Network-Based Application Recognition (NBAR) to classify packets Avoid Host-Based Packet Marking VolP HTTP FTP Separate “Conform” and “Exceed” Actions © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. VolP HTTP FTP VolP Platinum Class HTTP Gold Class FTP Bronze Class 34 Classification – Configuration Router(config)# class-map Gold Router(config-cmap )# match ip rtp 16384 17383 Router(config-cmap)# exit Router(config)# class-map Silver Router(config-cmap)# match protocol Citrix Router(config-cmap)# exit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 35 Policing – Monitoring Service Levels Policing is used to compare packet arrival rates to provisioned service agreements Policers identify flows as either conforming, exceeding, or violating the service agreement Different actions can be taken for conforming, exceeding, and violating packets Two types of Policers are available: • RFC 2697: A Single-Rate, Three-Color Marker • RFC 2698: A Dual-Rate, Three-Color Marker © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 36 Policing – Monitoring Service Levels Conform / Exceed / Violate Actions • drop • set-dscp-transmit • set-mpls-exp-transmit • set-prec-transmit • set-clp-transmit • set-de-transmit • set-qos-transmit • transmit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 37 Policing – Single-Rate, Three-Color Marker Usage: • Mark conforming traffic with a low drop precedence • Mark exceeding traffic with a high drop precedence • Drop violating traffic Definitions: • • • • • CIR – Committed Information Rate CBS – Committed Burst Size (max) EBS – Excess Burst Size (max) Tc – Current size of CBS bucket Te – Current size of EBS bucket © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 38 Policing – Single-Rate, Three-Color Marker © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 39 Policing – Configuration (SRTC) Router(config)# policy-map access-in Router(config-pmap)# class Silver Router(config-pmap-c)# police bps burstnormal burst-max conform-action action exceed-action action violate-action action Router(config-pmap)# exit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 40 Policing – Two-Rate, Three-Color Marker Usage: • Mark packets within CIR as conforming • Mark packets between CIR and PIR as exceeding • Drop packets above the PIR Definitions: • • • • • • CIR – Committed Rate PIR – Peak rate CBS – Committed burst size (max) PBS – Peak burst size (max) Tc – Current size of CBS bucket Tp – Current size of PBS bucket © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 41 Policing – Two-Rate, Three-Color Marker © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 42 Policing – Configuration (TRTC) Router(config)# policy-map access-in Router(config-pmap)# class Silver Router(config-pmap-c)# police cir cir bc burst-normal pir bps be burst-max conform-action action exceed-action action violate-action action Router(config-pmap)# exit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 43 Marking – Marker Locations and Size Type of Marking # of Bits Bits Location IP Precedence 3 Three most significant bits of TOS byte in IPv4 and IPv6 headers Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) 6 Six most significant bits of TOS byte in IPv4 and IPv6 headers MPLS Experimental (EXP) Bits 3 Part of 20 bit MPLS label Ethernet CoS Bits 3 ISL or 802.1q/p header ATM CLP Bit 1 ATM Cell header Frame Relay DE Bit 1 Frame Relay header © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 44 Marking – Configuration Router(config)# policy-map access-in Router(config-pmap)# class Silver Router(config-pmap-c)# set ip dscp 26 Router(config-pmap)# exit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 45 Queueing / Scheduling Determines the placement of packets in Queues and the Queue Servicing algorithms Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing (CBWFQ) makes the scheduler aware traffic classes instead of just traffic flows Low Latency Queuing (LLQ) adds a priority queue to Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing When there is no congestion the schedular uses First-In-First-Out (FIFO) © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 46 Queuing / Scheduling – CBWFQ Gold 40% High Bandwidth, Low-Delay Silver 25% Bounded Bandwidth and Delay Bronze 10% Best Effort Step 1: Define Classes Step 2: Define Bandwidth Queue weights are assigned to traffic classes instead of flows Class definitions allow the specification of minimum bandwidth Unused capacity in one class is made available to traffic in other classes Queues can be configured differently for each class © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 47 Queuing / Scheduling – LLQ V V 1 1 Priority Class Class 1 Class 2 2 3 3 3 2 Interface PQ 4 3 2 V V 1 1 3 WFQ Class 3 Class-Default 4 4 4 4 7 6 5 LLQ adds a guaranteed priority queue to CB-WFQ Allows strict priority queuing to be applied to any traffic class, not just RTP/UDP (IP RTP Priority) Bandwidth assigned to the priority queue is not shared with other classes © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 48 Queuing / Scheduling – Configuration Router(config)# policy-map wan_policy Router(config-pmap)# class Gold Router(config-pmap-c)# priority 128 Router(config-pmap)# exit Router(config-pmap)# class Silver Router(config-pmap-c)# bandwidth 256 Router(config-pmap)# exit Router(config-pmap)class class-default Router(config-pmap-c)# fair-queue © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 49 Queuing / Scheduling – Configuration Absolute Percent Specifications for LLQ policy-map Multiservice class VoIP priority percent 10 (OR prior class business bandwidth percent 30 class data bandwidth percent 20 Relative Percent Specifications for LLQ policy-map Multiservice class VoIP priority percent 10 class business bandwidth remaining percent 80 class class-default bandwidth remaining percent 20 © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 50 Shaping – Class-Based Generic Router(config)# policy-map access-out Router(config-pmap)# class Silver Router(config-pmap-c)# shape {average | peak} cir bc be Router(config-pmap)# exit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 51 Shaping – Class-Based Frame-Relay Router(config)# interface serial 0 Router(config-if)# frame-relay traffic-shaping Router(config-if)# interface s0.1 point-to-point Router(config-subif)# frame-relay interface-dlci 100 Router(config-fr-dlci)# class frts Router(config)# map-class frame-relay frts Router(config-map-class)# frame-relay cir 56000 Router(config-map-class)# frame-relay bc 560 Router(config-map-class)# frame-relay be 0 Router(config-map-class)# frame-relay mincir 56000 Router(config-map-class)# no frame-relay adaptive-shaping © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 52 Congestion Avoidance If a queue becomes full, all of the packets that overflow the queue get dropped – TailDrop Tail-Drops cause the TCP congestion control algorithms to activate on a large number of sessions, causing global synchronization A mechanism is needed to prevent queue exhaustion, thereby preventing global synchronization © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 53 TCP Slow Start / Congestion Control 45 40 35 Congestion Avoidance Phase Linear Growth 30 25 20 15 10 5 Slow Start Exponential Growth 0 20 © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 50 54 Congestion Avoidance: The Problem Queue Utilization 100% Time Tail Drop 3 Traffic Flows Start at Different Times © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Another Traffic Flow Starts at this Point 55 Weighted Random Early Detect (WRED) Drop Probability 1 1/m 0 Min 1 Min 2 Min 3 Max 1 Max 2 Max 3 Average Queue Depth © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Max Queue Length(Tail Drop) 56 WRED Configuration Router(config)# policy-map wan_policy Router(config-pmap)# class Silver Router(config-pmap-c)# bandwidth percent 20 Router(config-pmap-c)# random-detect dscp-based Router(config-pmap-c)# random-detect dscp dscpvalue min-threshold max-threshold (markprobability-denominator) Router(config-pmap)# exit © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 57 Configuring QoS in IOS MQC Abstractions and Syntax class-map [match-any | match-all] class-name Enters configuration sub-mode for class definition policy-map policy-name Enters configuration sub-mode for policy definition (marking, policing, shaping, queuing, etc.) service-policy {input | output} policy-name Command in interface configuration sub-mode to apply QoS policy for input or output traffic © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 58 A University QoS Scenario © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 59 University Scenario – Requirements Guarantee 512 Kb/s to multicast traffic across my campus • Application is video-on-demand – requires guaranteed bandwidth, low loss, bounded delay and jitter • Guaranteed priority service is not necessary Limit Napster to 10% of my internet link (T1) © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 60 University Scenario—Topology GW RP Source T1 Traffic Flow Internet Receiver © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 61 University Scenario – Design Use policy-based routing or class-based marking to mark IP precedence bits for multicast traffic as close to source as possible Use class-based weighted fair queuing (CBWFQ) to guarantee bandwidth Use NBAR to recognize Napster and then traffic policing to limit it to 10% of the T1 Internet link © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 62 University Scenario – Configuration On the router closest to the source: Router(config)# class-map ipmc Router(config-cmap)# match access-group 100 Router(config)# policy-map markipmc Router(config-pmap)# class ipmc Router(config-pmap-c)# set ip precedence 4 Router(config)# interface ethernet0/0 Router(config-if)# service-policy input markipmc Router(config-if)# Router(config)# access-list 100 permit udp any 224.0.0.0 31.255.255.255 © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 63 University Scenario – Configuration Queuing configuration multicast-tree routers: Router(config)# class-map multicast Router(config-cmap)# match ip precedence 4 Router(config)# policy-map univq Router(config-pmap)# class multicast Router(config-pmap-c)# bandwidth 512 Router(config-pmap-c)# ! Router(config)# interface ethernet0/0 Router(config-if)# service-policy output univq © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 64 University Scenario – Configuration On the Gateway (GW) Router: Router(config)# class-map Napster Router(config-cmap)# match protocol napster Router(config)# policy-map limitnapster Router(config-pmap)# class Napster Router(config-pmap-c)# police 153600 Router(config)# interface serial0 Router(config)# bandwidth 1536 Router(config-if)# service-policy input limitnapster Router(config-if)# service-policy output limitnapster © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 65 Useful Information • CCO QoS page http://www.cisco.com/go/qos • Cisco IOS 12.2 QoS documentation • “IP Quality of Service” book http://www.ciscopress.com/book.cfm?series=1&book=173 © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 66 Session IPS–230 2881_05_2001 © 2001, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 67