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author | Christian Poessinger <christian@poessinger.com> | 2018-10-05 17:19:14 +0200 |
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committer | Christian Poessinger <christian@poessinger.com> | 2018-10-05 17:19:17 +0200 |
commit | 28fc6c0e071a7883a2b7f4f1a71beba54770084b (patch) | |
tree | 016fc8f3df397f386686bb489de402fabed8bd07 /docs | |
parent | b930bd7ee68b439c2a01440d6802fcd2bb083ebc (diff) | |
download | vyos-documentation-28fc6c0e071a7883a2b7f4f1a71beba54770084b.tar.gz vyos-documentation-28fc6c0e071a7883a2b7f4f1a71beba54770084b.zip |
QoS: fixup chapter levels according to WiKi
at https://wiki.vyos.net/wiki/QoS
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/ch10-qos.rst | 112 |
1 files changed, 36 insertions, 76 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ch10-qos.rst b/docs/ch10-qos.rst index 36c136ab..e6346f41 100644 --- a/docs/ch10-qos.rst +++ b/docs/ch10-qos.rst @@ -14,13 +14,16 @@ nodes for the following shaping/queueing/policing disciplines: * TBF * DRR +Configuration nodes +------------------- + VyOS QoS configuration is done in two steps. The first one consists in setting up your classes/queues and traffic filters to distribute traffic amongst them. The second step is to apply such traffic policy to an interface ingress or egress. Creating a traffic policy -------------------------- +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Such configuration takes place under the `traffic-policy` tree. @@ -40,7 +43,7 @@ Available subtrees : set traffic-policy shaper-hfsc NAME Apply traffic policy to an interface ------------------------------------- +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Once a traffic-policy is created, you can apply it to an interface : @@ -124,7 +127,7 @@ Available commands: :code:`set traffic-policy limiter <policy-name> description <description>` Traffic classes -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +*************** * Define a traffic class for a limiter policy, range for class ID is 1...4095: @@ -162,7 +165,7 @@ Traffic classes * gb (gigabytes) Default class -^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +############# * Define a default class for a limiter policy that applies to traffic not matching any other classes for this policy: @@ -200,7 +203,7 @@ Default class :code:`set traffic-policy limiter <policy name> default priority <priority>` Matching rules -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +************** * Define a traffic class matching rule: @@ -411,7 +414,8 @@ Traffic classes :code:`set traffic-policy priority-queue <policy name> class <class ID> queue-type <type>` -**Default class** +Default class +############# * Define a default priority queue: @@ -431,7 +435,7 @@ Traffic classes :code:`set traffic-policy priority-queue <policy name> default queue-type <type>` Matching rules -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +************** * Define a class matching rule: @@ -851,7 +855,7 @@ Matching rules <match name> ipv6 protocol <proto>` Traffic shaper --------------- +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The shaper policy uses the Hierarchical Token Bucket algorithm to allocate different amounts of bandwidth to different traffic classes. In contrast to @@ -884,7 +888,7 @@ Avialable commands: * gbps (gigabytes per second) Traffic classes -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +*************** * Define a traffic class for a shaper policy, range for class ID is 2...4095: @@ -995,7 +999,7 @@ Traffic classes +---------+------------+--------+------------------------------+ Matching rules -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +************** * Define a class matching rule: @@ -1092,7 +1096,12 @@ Matching rules <match name> ipv6 protocol <proto>` shaper-hfsc (HFSC_ + sfq) -------------------------- +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +TBD + +Ingress shaping +--------------- The case of ingress shaping. Only a **limiter** policy can be applied directly for ingress traffic on an interface. It is possible though to use what is @@ -1167,13 +1176,13 @@ ether edit traffic-policy shaper SHAPER class 30 match MATCH ether destination -*********** +########### protocol -******** +######## source -****** +###### interface ********* @@ -1189,7 +1198,7 @@ ip edit traffic-policy shaper SHAPER class 30 match MATCH ip destination -*********** +########### .. code-block:: sh @@ -1197,14 +1206,14 @@ destination set destination port U32-PORT dscp -**** +#### .. code-block:: sh set dscp DSCPVALUE max-length -********** +########## .. code-block:: sh @@ -1213,13 +1222,14 @@ max-length Will match ipv4 packets with a total length lesser than set value. protocol -******** +######## + .. code-block:: sh set protocol <IP PROTOCOL> source -****** +###### .. code-block:: sh @@ -1227,7 +1237,7 @@ source set source port U32-PORT tcp -*** +### **NOTE:** you must set ip protocol to TCP to use the TCP filters. **NOTE#2**: This filter will only match packets with an IPv4 header length of @@ -1253,7 +1263,7 @@ ipv6 edit traffic-policy shaper SHAPER class 30 match MATCH ipv6 destination -*********** +########### .. code-block:: sh @@ -1261,14 +1271,14 @@ destination set destination port U32-PORT dscp -**** +#### .. code-block:: sh set dscp DSCPVALUE max-length -********** +########## .. code-block:: sh @@ -1277,14 +1287,14 @@ max-length Will match ipv6 packets with a payload length lesser than set value. protocol -******** +######## .. code-block:: sh set protocol IPPROTOCOL source -****** +###### .. code-block:: sh @@ -1292,7 +1302,7 @@ source set source port U32-PORT tcp -*** +### **NOTE**: you must set ipv6 protocol to TCP to use the TCP filters. **NOTE#2**: This filter will only match IPv6 packets with no header extension @@ -1324,61 +1334,11 @@ vif set traffic-policy shaper SHAPER class 30 match MATCH vif **vlan-tag** - - -Examples: ---------- - -One common use of traffic policy is to limit bandwidth for an interface. In -the example below we limit bandwidth for our LAN connection to 200 Mbit -download and out WAN connection to 50 Mbit upload: - -.. code-block:: sh - - set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT bandwidth '50Mbit' - set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT default bandwidth '50%' - set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT default ceiling '100%' - set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT default queue-type 'fair-queue' - - set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT bandwidth '200Mbit' - set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT default bandwidth '50%' - set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT default ceiling '100%' - set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT default queue-type 'fair-queue' - -Resulting in the following configuration: - -.. code-block:: sh - - traffic-policy { - shaper WAN-OUT { - bandwidth 50Mbit - default { - bandwidth 50% - ceiling 100% - queue-type fair-queue - } - } - shaper LAN-OUT { - bandwidth 200Mbit - default { - bandwidth 50% - ceiling 100% - queue-type fair-queue - } - } - } - -Once defined, a traffic policy can be applied to each interface using the -interface-level `traffic-policy` directive: - .. code-block:: sh set interfaces ethernet eth0 traffic-policy out 'WAN-OUT' set interfaces ethernet eth1 traffic-policy out 'LAN-OUT' -Note that a traffic policy can also be defined to match specific traffic flows -using class statements. - .. _tc: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tc_(Linux) .. _RFC791: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc791 .. _TBF: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Token_bucket |