thanks for your answer.
but i was wondering does a device (understading only IPP) gets a DSCP marking
isnt it going to ignore the last 3 bits anyway?
if yes what the point of the CS?
Abderrahim
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 18:12:33 -0400
Subject: Re: use of CS in qos?
From: jastorino_at_ipexpert.com
To: a_sadki1_at_hotmail.com
CC: ccielab_at_groupstudy.com
Hey,
IPP uses the most significant 3 bits in the ToS field in the IP header. With
DSCP the CS values essentially do the same thing. In order to be backwards
compatible with IPP it only uses the 3 most significant bits. Maybe this
will help you visualize:
CSx Dec. IPP Binary
CS1 8 1 001 000
CS2 16 2 010 000
CS3 24 3 011 000
CS4 32 4 100 000
CS5 40 5 101 000
CS6 48 6 110 000
CS7 56 7 111 000
HTH
On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 5:04 PM, abderrahim sadki <a_sadki1_at_hotmail.com>
wrote:
Hi all.
I understand that CS is used for backward compatibility with IP precedence.
My question is :
if a device only understands the IP precedence and it receives a packet with
the dscp marking isnt it going to ignore the last 3 bits anyway?
Thanks,
Abderrahim
Received on Fri Jul 03 2009 - 22:18:08 ART
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