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qos(7) [bsd man page]

QOS(7)								   Miscellaneous							    QOS(7)

NAME
qos - Quality of Service specification DESCRIPTION
The text2qos and qos2text functions use the format described in this man page. Because all standard ATM tools on Linux use those functions to convert to or from the textual representation of QOS specifications, they expect them in the same format too. The most fundamental parameters are the traffic class and the AAL (ATM Adaption Layer) type. If the connection is bi-directional, both directions have the same traffic class and the same AAL type. The traffic class and the AAL type are the first elements (in any order) in a QOS specification. The traffic class is the only required element. If the AAL type is omitted, the application will provide a default value. The following traffic classes are recognized: ubr Unassigned Bit Rate cbr Constant Bit Rate abr Available Bit Rate The following AAL types are recognized: aal0 ("raw ATM") aal5 If both, the traffic class and the AAL type are specified, they are separated by a comma. If more parameters are supplied, the traffic class and AAL type must be followed by a colon. Traffic parameters can be specified indepen- dently for the transmit and the receive direction. Their parameter lists are prefixed with tx: and rx:, respectively. If both parameter lists are present, the tx: list must precede the rx: list. If a parameter is equal for both directions, it can be placed in a common param- eter list (without prefix). The general format is as follows: class_and_aal:common_list,tx:list,rx:list Each list consists of elements specifying a parameter. Elements can appear in any order and they are separated with commas. The following elements are recognized: pcr=rate is a synonym for max_pcr=rate max_pcr=rate The upper limit for the peak cell rate to assign. If omitted, any rate up to link speed may be chosen. min_pcr=rate The lower limit for the peak cell rate to assign. If omitted, any rate above zero can be chosen. sdu=size is a synonym for max_sdu=size max_sdu=size The size of the largest packet that may be sent or received. If omitted, a context-dependent default value is used. Values are specified as follows: rate The (decimal) rate, optionally followed by a unit. The unit may be prefixed with one of the multipliers k, M, or G, meaning 1'000, 1'000'000, or 1'000'000'000, respectively. The units cps (cells per second) and bps (bits per second) are recognized. If multiplier and unit are omitted, cells per second are assumed. Note that the rate is always converted to cells per second, so rounding errors may occur when specifying the rate in bits per second. Rates measured in bits per second are considered to be user data rates, i.e. one cell corresponds to 384 bits. The rate can be a fractional value, e.g. 1.3Mbps. It is an error to specify only a multiplier without a unit. Link speed can be indicated by using the keyword max as the rate. size The (decimal) number of bytes. The tx: or rx: lists may also just contain the single element none, which indicates that the corresponding direction is not used. It is an error to specify none for both direction. Note that commas must never follow colons or other commas. Also, whitespace is not allowed inside a QOS specification. QOS specifications are case-insensitive. EXAMPLES
Each of the following lines contains a valid QOS specification: ubr ubr:pcr=100kbps cbr,aal0:pcr=64kbps CBR:max_pcr=11Mbps,min_pcr=10mbps,sdu=8192 aal5,ubr:tx:none cbr:tx:pcr=30000,rx:none The following specificiations are equivalent: CBR,AAL5:PCR=48Mbps cbr,aal5:max_pcr=125000 cbr,aal5:tx:pcr=125kcps,rx:pcr=125kcps AUTHOR
Werner Almesberger, EPFL LRC/ICA <werner.almesberger@epfl.ch> Linux April 20, 2000 QOS(7)
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