The Story Thus Far
As a refresher for readers, the first article in this series,
(Sys Admin Vol 9, Issue 9) provided an overview of QoS and
various methods that could be used to differentiate types of network
traffic. In the second article in this series (Sys Admin
Vol 9, Issue 10), I discussed QoS with the data link layer, outlining
the role of the IEEE 802.1p standard in a switched-based LAN environment.
The third (Sys Admin Vol 9, Issue 11) and fourth (Sys
Admin Vol 9, Issue 12) articles comprised a two-part mini-series
that described how traffic can be differentiated as it flows into
a WAN. The third article focused on router queues and described
different queuing methods, as well as illustrated relevant Cisco
router commands to effect such methods. I concluded that article
with an examination of the Type of Service (ToS) byte in the IP
header, which paved the way for the second article that focused
upon QoS into the network. That article covered the manner by which
the use of the ToS byte was revised by the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). That revision, which was the focus of the fourth
article, examined how the ToS byte was used to provide differentiated
service (DiffServ) information to routers to expedite the flow of
traffic through a network.
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