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WRED and classes

afilandro
Level 1
Level 1

Every example I see and what we have deployed is WRED "Random detect dscp-based" on our "class class-default"

Why is it, that you wouldnt stick "random-detect" on the other classes you have defined OR would you? Shouldnt RED and the Tail-drop (WeightedRed) only work on class-default so then the only traffic would be marked DSCP0 anyways? Or am i missing something??

9 Replies 9

owaisberg
Level 1
Level 1

Afilandro,

There is no such restriction to use WRED

in the default class only. In fact you can

use it in any class within your policy and

even in the multiple classes at the same

time.

Example:

--------------------------------------------

policy-map queue-on-dscp

class dscp-ef

bandwidth 58

class dscp-af41

bandwidth 22

class dscp-af21

bandwidth 20

random-detect dscp-based

class dscp-af23

bandwidth 8

random-detect dscp-based

class class-default

fair-queue

random-detect dscp-based

-------------------------------------------

HTH,

OW

* Please rate all useful posts

I know you CAN but Im just wondering why would you?

I guess the real question is:

If I am trying to drop things first in the default queue randomly, I apply "random detect" there. If then I want to drop things randomly when queues are exahasted, (it is 40 default not 60 with WRED though), then i put it in other classes.

I guess the confusion is, If i use "Dscp-based" Wred in one class say class-default..what does that even do? Its only going to see things with DSCP0 in that class anyways so why is that even relevant at all to use? Kinda makes no sense really to me.

I know im missing something

When you use WRED in default-class it is

used for the rest of non classified traffic

so in example above it is actually as if

you run WRED in a non class-based configuration. Even though it is not used

for classified by DCSP values traffic it still

performs congestion-avoidance for non the

rest of the traffic.

HTH,

OW

I thought you can't configure bandwidth commands in way that the total sum exceeds 75% (if default values are used) or 100% (if max-reserv band command is set to 100%.)

Your configuration configures the bandwidth to 108% even without the default class. My Q is - what is the router going to do if every class asks for the BW at the same time?

ilya.varlashkin
Level 3
Level 3

WRED is also used with other classes. You just need to foresee effect of it if traffic in that class is non-TCP - sometimes it will work good sometimes not really. By the way, tail-drop is not weighted RED.

The only major difference between class-default and other classes is that you can enable fair-queue within class-default, but not in other classes (so traffic within other classes is always FIFO). Other features you can configure in any class, including WRED.

You can have non-DSCP0 traffic in class-default and you can have DSCP0 traffic in class other than class-default, as well as multiple DSCP within any class. Class-default actually does not automagically remark traffic to DSCP0 unless you explicitly configure it to do so.

Hope this helps.

Thank you itya, it does help

Let me ask one followup.

I mark with DSCP on either a 6509 switch or the Fastethernet on the wanrouter, for the particular class ie:

policy-map Fastein

class voice-in

set dscp ef

class video-in

set dscp cs4

class interactive-in

set dscp af21

class gold-in

set dscp af31

class network-in

set dscp cs2

class scavenger-in

set dscp cs1

class class-default

set dscp default

So all DSCPs are "reset" before they get output to the Wan.

Here is what, by default I will use on the outbound nested policy for many sites:

policy-map pol-default

class ROUTING

bandwidth percent 2

class VOICE

priority percent 5

class VIDEO

priority 200

class INTERACTIVE

bandwidth percent 32

class GOLD

bandwidth percent 10

class BULK-DAY

police 768000 129046 conform-action transmit exceed-action drop

class BULK-NIGHT

police 2753000 516187 conform-action transmit exceed-action drop

class NETWORK

bandwidth percent 3

class SCAVENGER

bandwidth percent 1

police 8000 2000 conform-action transmit exceed-action drop

class class-default

bandwidth percent 25

random-detect dscp-based

random-detect ecn

In a couple situations, I changed class-default to "fair-queue" without a bandwidth and it does seem to work better.

Would you suggest I add WRED to each of the other classes just so things will drop based on DSCP kinda in order of "worst to best"...because right now it looks like im only dropping the worst traffic with WRED if another class became congested, right?

Thanks again

Alan

I'd first suggest you to profile your traffic to see what you actually have there and how much. At least add following command to each of your clases:

estimate bandwidth

and after about a week look at 'sh policy-map interface'.

After that you can consider adding policer to each class that will pass conforming traffic unchanged, but for excessive traffic it will increase loss-priority (e.g. from AF31 to AF32 for exceeding and to AF33 for violating), then WRED you could enable WRED and watch if it does good or bad. In you current configuration WRED will work just like ordinary RED.

By the way, you configure both VIDEO and VOICE with priority command with intent to have them different queues with priority higher than the rest. In reality they're both directed into the same queue (you could see in 'sh policy-map interface'). VIDEO packets being not so small may impact your VOICE traffic (since both are in the same queue).

Another problem is that your use 'bandwidth' with percentage, but 'priority' with absolute value, that won't be accepted - you need to use either percentage in all classes or absolute value in all classes but not mixture.

Cheers,

iLya

Thanks Ilya.

Thats a good idea I didnt think of that.

Yah the Video is just multicast outbound protected--you actually can put in now a mix of percentage based and hard-bandwidth (12.3(10e code)... The Voice in that particular class is just some call-signaling stuff, for "real-voice" it is totally separate not shown in that example.

One question though, This really is to address the Citrix ICA Print killin the Interactive class---the print usually causes drops (tail drops) because it bursts the class (and link) to its max...so the normal ica drops.. We are trying to move to NBAR in hardware (6509s w/sup720s) to support the Citrix PDLM and have our Citrix folks "mark" the ICA Sessions so we can then break apart the Print.

But, until then, if I add the WRED to the interactive, remark, police the remarked like you said that would help i think ?

Is "Estimate bandwidth" you have to turn on Nbar collection correct?

Thanks again!

Alan

WRED should generally help, so yes I'd suggest you to give it a try (together with remarking policer) but watch out the result at least first few days.

You don't have to turn on Nbar to get estimate bandwidth to work.

Cheers,

iLya

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