User`s guide

Chapter 15 Quality of Service (QoS)
P-660HN-Fx User’s Guide
233
Port Select the check box and enter the port number of the source. 0 means any
source port number. See Appendix E on page 371 for some common services
and port numbers.
MAC Select the check box and enter the source MAC address of the packet.
MAC Mask Type the mask for the specified MAC address to determine which bits a packet’s
MAC address should match.
Enter “f” for each bit of the specified source MAC address that the traffic’s MAC
address should match. Enter “0“ for the bit(s) of the matched traffic’s MAC
address, which can be of any hexadecimal character(s). For example, if you set
the MAC address to 00:13:49:00:00:00 and the mask to ff:ff:ff:00:00:00, a packet
with a MAC address of 00:13:49:12:34:56 matches this criteria.
Exclude Select this option to exclude the packets that match the specified criteria from
this classifier.
Destination
Address Select the check box and enter the destination IP address in dotted decimal
notation.
Subnet
Netmask
Enter the destination subnet mask. Refer to the appendix for more information
on IP subnetting.
Port Select the check box and enter the port number of the destination. 0 means any
source port number. See Appendix E on page 371 for some common services
and port numbers.
MAC Select the check box and enter the destination MAC address of the packet.
MAC Mask Type the mask for the specified MAC address to determine which bits a packet’s
MAC address should match.
Enter “f” for each bit of the specified destination MAC address that the traffic’s
MAC address should match. Enter “0“ for the bit(s) of the matched traffic’s MAC
address, which can be of any hexadecimal character(s). For example, if you set
the MAC address to 00:13:49:00:00:00 and the mask to ff:ff:ff:00:00:00, a packet
with a MAC address of 00:13:49:12:34:56 matches this criteria.
Exclude Select this option to exclude the packets that match the specified criteria from
this classifier.
Others
Service This field simplifies classifier configuration by allowing you to select a predefined
application. When you select a predefined application, you do not configure the
rest of the filter fields.
SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) is a signaling protocol used in Internet
telephony, instant messaging and other VoIP (Voice over IP) applications. Select
the check box and select VoIP(SIP) from the drop-down list box to configure this
classifier for traffic that uses SIP.
File Transfer Protocol (FTP) is an Internet file transfer service that operates on
the Internet and over TCP/IP networks. A system running the FTP server
accepts commands from a system running an FTP client. The service allows
users to send commands to the server for uploading and downloading files.
Select the check box and select FTP from the drop-down list box to configure
this classifier for FTP traffic.
Protocol Select this option and select the protocol (TCP or UDP) or select User defined
and enter the protocol (service type) number. 0 means any protocol number.
Packet Length Select this option and enter the minimum and maximum packet length (from 28
to 1500) in the fields provided.
DSCP Select this option and specify a DSCP (DiffServ Code Point) number between 0
and 63 in the field provided.
Table 85 Advanced > QoS > Class Setup: Edit (continued)
LABEL DESCRIPTION