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Eclipse Connect ES
ETSI
Introduction
Eclipse Connect ES is a wireless link for Ethernet. It supports Fast Ethernet to 200 Mbps with
up to 8xE1 wayside circuits to provide an uncomplicated and cost effective alternative to fiber.
Connect ES is packaged as a link, with each terminal comprising an Indoor Unit (IDU ES) and
Outdoor Unit (ODU 300), with options for a direct-mount parabolic antennas ranging in
diameter from 0.3 m to 1.8 m.
Connect ES terminals include a Layer 2 switch to support four customer 10/100base-T ports,
two over-air transport channels and comprehensive VLAN and QoS options.
Corporate Headquarters
Channel bandwidths are selectable through a range of modulation options, from QPSK to 128
QAM, to support operator selection of radio system performance.
Stratex Networks
120 Rose Orchard Way
San Jose, CA 95134
Telephone: +1.408.943.0777
Connect ES may be used in single-link and networked applications, and can be over-air
interfaced to Eclipse Node comprising the INU, DAC ES, DAC 4x/16x and ODU 300. It is
also fully supported by Portal, the Eclipse craft tool, and by ProVision, Stratex Networks
network management system.
Facsimile: +1.408.944.1648/9
Figure. Eclipse Connect ES Terminal Comprising IDU ES, ODU 300 and Antenna
North America
NorthAmerica@stratexnet.com
Latin America
LatinAmerica@stratexnet.com
Asia Pacific
AsiaPacific@stratexnet.com
Europe
Europe@stratexnet.com
Sub-Saharan Africa
SouthAfrica@stratexnet.com
www.stratexnet.com
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Product Description
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Product Description
Table 1 shows available Ethernet data throughput with and without E1 wayside circuits, for
configurations with 4 or 8 waysides. Waysides can be configured in 1xE1 increments to the
8xE1 maximum.
Table 1. Connect ES Options for Ethernet Data and 4/8xE1 Wayside
Ethernet Data Throughput
(Duplex), Mbps
Channel Modulation
BW, MHz
N*QAM
7
13.75/14
27.5/28
55/56
Option
Link Capacity
Data Only
NxE1
Data +
4xE1
Data +
8xE1
16
Connect 20
10
20.5
12.3
4.1
64
Connect 30
16
32.8
24.6
16.3
16
Connect 40
20
41.0
32.8
24.6
32
Connect 50
27
55.3
47.1
38.9
16
Connect 50
32
65.5
57.3
49.2
32
Connect 100
52
106.5
98.3
90.1
128
Connect 150
75
153.6
145.4
137.2
16
Connect 50
75
153.6
145.4
137.2
64
Connect 200
106
196.6
196.6
196.6
[1] Check with Stratex Networks or your supplier for availability of RAC 3X versions for over-air operation to an
IDU ES.
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Product Description
Item
Description
Fuse/switch
To ODU connector
Maint. V.24
AUX Data
Alarm I/O
Status LEDs
NMS 10/100Base-T
Ethernet ports 1 to 4
10
E1 tributary interfaces 1 to 8
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Product Description
At 5GHz the ODU must be remote or indoor-mounted and a 7/16 DIN connector and coax
cable used to connect to a standard antenna. Unlike the 6 GHz+ ODUs it can be software
switched for Tx High or Tx Low operation.
All ODUs meet the ASTME standard for a 2000 hour salt-spray test, and relevant IEC, UL,
and Bellcore standards for wind-driven rain.
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Product Description
Ethernet Module
The Ethernet module incorporates an intelligent ISO layer 2+ switch, to provide the switching,
prioritization and queuing functions between ports and transport channels, C1 and C2. It
supports address learning for efficient management of Ethernet traffic in multi-host situations,
and advanced layer 3 and layer 2 settings for traffic prioritization.
A gate array supports channel assignment and mux/demux to the digital baseband.
The four 10/100Base-T Fast Ethernet ports may be connected to the transport channels in
transparent, VLAN or mixed modes. Channel capacity is determined by the number of E1
circuits mapped to the channel, where each E1 supports a 2.048 Mbps throughput. With one
exception[2] the full NxE1 capacity of the radio link can be dedicated to Ethernet, or to a mix of
Ethernet and E1 waysides up to a maximum 8xE1 waysides in 1xE1 increments.
Each channel supports a maximum 48xE1 for a maximum throughput of 98.3 Mbps per
channel, and a combined Ethernet maximum of 196.6 Mbps.
Transparent Mode
This is the default, broadcast mode; all ports and channels are interconnected. It
supports up to four customer connections (ports 1 to 4) with bridging to and between
the two transport channels (C1, C2).
Transparent Mode
VLAN Mode
VLAN or transport mode supports up to four separate LAN connections. Port 1 is
dedicated to channel 1, and ports 2 to 4 are multiplexed to channel 2 to provide three
virtual LANs (VLANs 2, 3 and 4). Internal VLAN port tagging of packets provides
correct end-to-end matching of port traffic over the channel 2 link. Tags are removed
before port egress at the far end.
[2] The exception is Connect 200, where its 106xE1 link capacity (217 Mbps) exceeds the Ethernet module maximum
of 96xE1 / 196.6 Mbps. The additional Connect 200 capacity may be used to transport up to 8xE1 waysides
without impacting the 196.6 Mbps Ethernet maximum.
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Product Description
VLAN Mode
Mixed Mode
Mixed or hybrid mode provides a two-LAN solution. The first provides a dedicated
port 1 to channel 1 connection. The second provides a transparent (broadcast)
connection, tying ports 2, 3 and 4 to channel 1. Packets received on any of these ports
will be allowed to broadcast to the other three ports, but not to port 1 or channel 1.
Mixed Mode
QoS Configuration
On networks where bandwidth is restricted or when priority for low-latency traffic such as
voice and interactive video must be assured, Eclipse Connect ES supports industry standard
QoS (Quality of Service) queue management techniques. Selections are provided for layer 3
ToS (Type of Service) and layer 2 CoS (Class of Service) priority settings plus simple portbased queuing.
IDU ES supports traffic prioritization options of:
Port Priority
Provides selection of a simple port priority, where each port may be assigned a 1 to 4
priority, where 4 is the highest. This prioritization only has relevance to ports using a
shared channel. Ports with higher priority will have their data packets accepted by the
queue controller ahead of the lower priority ports on a 8:4:2:1 weighted basis where, for
example, eight priority 4 packets will be sent for every one priority 1 packet.
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Product Description
Priority Mode
Enables traffic prioritization over a network based on tagging applied within the ToS field
of a layer 3 packet header, or more commonly within the CoS field of a layer 2 header.
For the IDU ES it is a read-only selection, and a selection applies to all ports (IDU ES
cannot set tags).
A four-level priority queuing stack is supported, which means:
- Each of the possible 63 levels in the ToS (DiffServ) field in a layer 3 header are
mapped into a four-level (2-bit) priority level within the IDU ES.
- Each of the possible eight priority values in the CoS (802.1p) field in the layer 2
header are mapped into a four-level (2-bit) priority level within the IDU ES.
Priority mode mapping data is shown in Table 3.
Table 3. Priority Mapping Table
Priority Level
VLAN 802.1p
DiffServ Value
Port Default
4 high/premium
6,7
48 - 63
4,5
32 - 47
2,3
16 - 31
1 low
0,1
0 - 15
on DiffServ .
- DiffServ-then-802.1p provides prioritization based first on DiffServ tagging, then
on 802.1p.
Port-priority prioritization will apply to incoming packets if packets are not tagged.
Flow Control
Flow Control is an option for full-duplex links only. It is implemented through use of IEEE
802.3x pause frames, which tell the remote node to stop or restart transmission to ensure that
the amount of data in the receive buffer does not exceed a high water mark. The receiver will
signal to the transmitter to stop transmitting until sufficient data has been read from the buffer,
triggered by a low water mark, at which point the receiver signals to the transmitter to resume
transmission.
To be effective, flow control must be established from the originating source through to the end
point, and vice versa, which means the equipment connected to the IDU ES ports and beyond
must also be enabled for flow control.
Latency
Network latency refers to the time taken for a data packet to get from source to destination. For
an IP network it is particularly relevant to voice (VoIP) or videoconferencing; the lower the
latency, the better the quality.
Latency is typically measured in milliseconds for one-way and two-way (round-trip) transits.
For phone conversations a one-way latency of 200 ms is considered acceptable. Other
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Product Description
applications are more tolerant; Intranet access should be less than 5 seconds, whereas for non
real-time applications such as email and file transfers, latency issues do not normally apply.
Within an Eclipse network, the per-hop delay time is primarily dependent on the capacity of
the radio link; the lower the capacity, the greater the delay. Table 4 shows nominal delay times.
Table 4. Typical Eclipse Connect ES and Eclipse Node Delay Times (one-way)
Capacity
50 Mbps
100 Mbps
150 Mbps
0.7 ms
0.35 ms
0.17 ms
11.2 ms
5.6 ms
2.8 ms
Other contributors to overall latency are the devices connected to the Eclipse network, which
for a VoIP circuit will include the external gateway processes of voice encoding and decoding,
IP framing, packetization and jitter buffers. Contributing to external network latency are
devices such as routers and firewalls.
Auxiliary Data
The DB-9 AUX Data connector supports one synchronous or asynchronous auxiliary data
channel, which may be used to transport 3rd party NMS (or other data):
Asynchronous rates are 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, or 19200 bps, with parity and stop bit
selection.
Auxiliary data is transported within the link overhead, which is shared with NMS data.
Alarm I/O
The HD-15 Alarm I/O connector supports two TTL alarm inputs and four Form-C relay
outputs.
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Product Description
Individual alarm inputs are mapped to any output within an Eclipse network. Similarly,
individual internal events can be mapped to any output.
Alarm Inputs
The active state of each TTL alarm input is configurable to be active if the voltage on the input
is high, or active if the voltage is low. The alarm software detects a change in the state of each
input circuit, and raises or clears an input accordingly. The nominal alarm polling rate is 1
second.
Alarm Outputs
Outputs are user configurable to be normally high or normally low. Default is normally low
(relay inactive). Additionally, a user can select on the Alarm I/O connector, a normally closed
or normally open contact pair.
IF Module
The IF module is the intermediary between the digital baseband and ODU 300. It provides the
primary modulation and demodulation processes to/from the ODU, and configuration of the
radio modulation/bandwidth options. Via its N-Plexor it also provides a telemetry channel for
ODU management, and -48 Vdc for ODU power.
Management Module
The management module provides:
DC/DC converter
The management module also supports two long-life axial fans. Fan operation is temperature
controlled such that under normal conditions one fan operates. Operation is cycled between the
two, but both will operate if one fails to keep the temperature below a preset threshold.
ODU 300
The quadrature modulated signal from the IF module is processed to derive separate I and Q
signals to modulate a Tx IF, which when mixed with the transmit local oscillator at the mixer
stage, provides the selected transmit frequency. Local oscillators are synthesizer types.
Between the IQ modulator and the mixer, a variable attenuator provides software adjustment of
Tx power.
After the mixer, the transmit signal is amplified and passed via the diplexer to the antenna feed
port.
A microprocessor in the ODU supports configuration of the synthesizers, transmit power, and
alarm and performance monitoring.
A DC-DC converter provides the required low-voltage DC rails from the -48 Vdc supply.
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Product Description
In the receive direction, the signal from the diplexer is passed via a low noise amplifier to an
Rx mixer, where it is mixed with the receive local oscillator to provide the Rx IF. It is then
amplified in a gain-controlled stage to compensate for fluctuations in receive level, and
converted to the cable IF for transport via the ODU cable to the IDU ES IF module.
Tx/Rx split options are based on ETSI plans for each frequency band. The actual frequency
range per band and the allowable splits are range-limited to prevent incorrect user selection.
A power monitor is included in the common port of the diplexer to provide measurement of
transmit power.
Using one transport channel, Connect ES supports Ethernet capacities to 98.3 Mbps. Using
both channels, Connect ES supports two separate Ethernet LANs to a maximum 98.3 Mbps on
each for a total of 196.6 Mbps (Connect 200 option).
Link capacity may be configured to support Ethernet together with E1 wayside tribs, up to
maximum 8xE1 waysides in 1xE1 increments. For example, a radio configured for a
throughput of 106 Mbps (Connect 100 option, 52xE1) may be used to support:
106 Mbps Ethernet using both transport channels and no E1 tribs. The split
between channel (LAN) assignments may be 53/53 Mbps through to 98/8 Mbps.
104 Mbps Ethernet and 1xE1, through to 90 Mbps Ethernet and 8xE1.
LANs supported on transport channels C1 and C2 cannot be paralleled without use of an
external aggregation or trunking switch, as doing so will create an IP loop.
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Product Description
When used in this way, the LAN mode and QoS settings would normally be configured within
the external switch, and a single port connection used to the IDU ES.
With just one channel in use (C1 or C2), the maximum Ethernet capacity supported is 98.3
Mbps (48xE1). For this throughput an optimum solution is provided by the Connect 100
option, which with on over-air link capacity of 52xE1 supports a total throughput of 106.5
Mbps for 98.3 Mbps Ethernet and up to 4xE1 waysides. Where additional E1 tribs are required
(to a maximum 8xE1) Ethernet capacity is reduced in 2.048 Mbps steps per trib.
The next step up in radio capacity is the Connect 150, which while easily accommodating a
single channel Ethernet maximum of 98 Mbps and the maximum 8xE1 waysides, is not an
efficient solution for this configuration as 39 Mbps of available throughput is not used.
However, if both IDU ES channels are used, as shown in Figure 8, then total Ethernet
throughput can be to 153 Mbps for Connect 150, and to 196 Mbps for Connect 200. The IDU
ES is configured for Mixed Mode to support two independent LANs/VLANs on transport
channels C1 and C2, and each is separately ported to the external switch.
Figure 8. Connect ES Link with 3rd Party Switch Both Channels
The separate LANs, (VLAN 1 and VLAN 2) cannot simply be paralleled at each end of the
link to provide a single LAN entity. However a solution is provided by switches that support
aggregation.
Figure 9 shows how such paralleling, or load-sharing, can be achieved using LAN link
aggregation; a feature now supported by many layer-2 managed switches, or trunking switches.
Load sharing aggregates available Ethernet bandwidth from two separate physical LAN links
to support a single higher capacity LAN/VLAN. Doing so also provides a more resilient end-
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Product Description
end connection, and enables load balancing whereby communications activity is distributed
across both Ethernet channels to help ensure that no one channel is overwhelmed.
Link aggregation prevents a failure of one LAN channel leading to the complete
disruption of traffic that would otherwise have been assigned to that channel. If
one channel fails, then capacity available on the other channel is shared. While the
reduced bandwidth may result in some traffic loss for low-priority traffic, it should
ensure security for all higher priority traffic. Under normal situations load
balancing ensures equitable traffic distribution between the two LAN channels.
Performance is improved because with appropriate QoS settings the capacity of an
aggregated LAN link is higher than each individual link.
Standard LAN technology provides data rates of 10/100 Mbps and 1000 Mbps.
Aggregation can fill the gaps when an intermediate performance level is more
appropriate. For example by aggregating two 100 Mbps LANs, a step from 100
Mbps to 1000 Mbps LAN technology can be avoided where only 200 Mbps is
required.
Where link aggregation is to be used, the switch function within the IDU ES should be
disabled, so that it operates as a straight LAN cable. Contact your Stratex Networks Helpdesk
for guidance on this procedure.
Figure 9. Connect ES Link with 3rd Party Switch Both Channels and Load Sharing
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Product Description
Connect ES radio links cannot be hot-standby or diversity protected. Where such protection is
required, use the Eclipse Node with a DAC ES installed for Ethernet access, and one or more
DAC 16x or DAC 4x plug-in cards for E1 tribs.
Eclipse Node and Connect ES may be included within the same network, either as back-toback links or end-to-end terminals over a common radio path. The mid-air meet capability[3] of
the IDU ES and DAC ES supports IDU ES spurring from an Eclipse Node, as illustrated in
Figure 11.
[3] Node-to-IDU ES linking requires RAC/ODU compatibility; contact Stratex Networks or your supplier for
guidance.
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Product Description
Ring Concepts
Eclipse Connect ES is ideally suited to Ethernet ring topologies where traffic redundancy is
provided by alternate path switching in an IP environment. The contention that would
otherwise occur with the arrival of looped IP data streams is managed by the Rapid Spanning
Tree Protocol (RSTP), which is supported on an externally connected switch at each ring site.
RSTP creates a tree that spans all of the switches in a network, forcing redundant
(alternate) paths into a standby, or blocked state. If subsequently one network
segment becomes unreachable because of a device or link failure, the RSTP
algorithm reconfigures the tree to activate the required standby path.
Figure 12 illustrates the ring concept, which supports Ethernet bandwidths to 98 Mbps for a
single channel connection, or as in Figure 13, to 2x98 Mbps using both channels.
Figure 12. Connect ES Links in a Ring
Fast Ethernet to 98.3 Mbps (48xE1) is supported using the Connect 100 link
option.
Just one IDU ES transport channel (C1 or C2) is used.
Each IDU ES is configured for Transparent Mode operation.
One Ethernet port on each IDU ES is connected to the RSTP layer 2 switch.
The RSTP switch may be used to support VLAN operation over the ring.
For NMS visibility around ring, IDU ES terminals are interconnected at each site
via their Ethernet NMS ports (Mdi or MdiX cable).
E1 circuits can also be configured on each link as pt-to-pt connections (not ring
protected). Up to 4xE1 may be configured without impacting the single-channel
98 Mbps Ethernet bandwidth of a Connect 100 link. Beyond 4xE1, Ethernet
bandwidth is reduced by 2 Mbps for each additional E1 circuit.
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Product Description
Higher ring capacities are supported by Connect 150 or Connect 200 links, as illustrated in
Figure 13. For these options both IDU ES transport channels are used, which effectively
operate as two concentric rings (two LANs). The RSTP switch at each site must support
alternate path switching on the two independent LAN rings, and where aggregation into a
single LAN is required, also support link aggregation. Refer to the Load Sharing example
under Basic Link with External Ethernet Switch for more information on link aggregation.
The example network includes a spur to Site F, and has E1 circuits configured between sites.
Figure 13. Connect ES Links in an Extended Capacity Ring
For Connect 150 and Connect 200, both IDU ES transport channels (C1 & C2) are
used. For other Connect ES options (Connect 20 to Connect 100) use of C1 and
C2 is optional, as only one channel is needed for these capacities.
The two transport channels effectively provide two concentric LAN rings. Each
channel is brought out on separate IDU ES ports for connection to an RSTP
switch. They may be to independent switches, or as shown, to one switch that has
support for alternate path switching for two LANs, and LAN-link aggregation to
present one physical 200 Mbps LAN connection to the customer.
The E1 circuits are point-to-point configured. 4xE1 runs counter-clockwise from
Site A to drops at Sites E, D and C. 4xE1 also runs clockwise from Site A to drops
at Sites B, C and D. E1 tribs are back-to-back connected between IDU ES
terminals at intermediate sites.
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Product Description
Example Networks
This section provides example network applications. Applications are included for:
An external layer 2 switch is used at the main office to support the 5+ devices
connected. At the remote office, the DAC ES directly supports switch functions
for up to four devices.
The IDU ES is operated in transparent mode.
Legacy PBXs are shown, with an E1 trunk inter-connection.
A Connect 20 option (10xE1) is used to provide 18 Mbps Ethernet (9xE1) and
a 1xE1 trib.
The network may easily be extended to other sites using a star and/or ring
topology. See Figure 15.
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Product Description
External layer 2 switches are used at the main office and office A. At office B,
with just four devices on the local LAN, the IDU ES provides switch support
directly.
The external switches and PBX VoIP trunk cards set QoS tagging.
VoIP traffic is 802.1p level 7 tagged (highest priority).
802.1p tagging may also be applied on other ports to provide end-end portbased prioritization between main and office A sites.
At all sites, the IDU ES is set for 802.1p port priority.
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Product Description
Ensures VoIP traffic has highest priority on the network, then any lowerlevel tagged traffic, and lastly untagged traffic.
- At office B, tagged traffic only has relevance for the VoIP port, P4. There
are no other devices on the office B LAN that can set 802.1p tags. However
Port Priority can be set to provide weighting in favor of one or more of the
local workstations for access to the local LAN and the network.
Radio link capacities may be extended to support up to 106 Mbps Ethernet
using Connect 100 (both transport channels), 153 Mbps using Connect 150, and
196 Mbps using Connect 200.
The network can easily be extended to other sites using star and/or ring
topology.
-
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CoS and/or ToS packet header tagging can be applied by the external switches
for traffic prioritization. Port Priority prioritization can also be used.
- The L2 switches support 802.1p CoS tagging, and port priority.
- The L3 switches support DiffServ ToS tagging, 802.1p CoS tagging, and
port priority.
- QoS tagging particularly applies to voice and video traffic.
- The DAC ES cards and IDU ES are configured for a 802.1p and/or
DiffServ Priority Mode, depending on the external switch settings.
The protected link capacity could be increased to 75xE1 to support two
Ethernet channels with a combined maximum of 153 Mbps. These two
channels may be operated as separate fast Ethernet VLANs, or combined
within the layer 3 switch to support a single aggregated 150 Mbps connection.
The network can easily be extended to other sites using star and/or ring
topology.
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Product Description
To support a total 153 Mbps, both IDU ES channels are used; 98 Mbps on
transport channel 1 for LAN 1, and 55 Mbps on channel 2 for LAN 2.
Each LAN is held separate; their traffic is not aggregated in this example.
While IDU ES supports up to 8xE1 circuits, this capability has not been used on
the ring for the PBX and land mobile connections as unlike Ethernet traffic it
would not be protected. By transitioning E1 circuits over Ethernet via TDMoIP
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Product Description
devices at each end, they are afforded normal Ethernet alternate-path protection.
Assigning an 802.1p level 7 priority (highest) on the voice ports will provide the
low latency needed.
For information on the RSTP switch, refer to Ring Concepts on page 15.
Ring capacity could be increased to support up to 196 Mbps total throughput,
using the Connect 200 option.
Summary
Eclipse Connect ES provides highly flexible and cost efficient solutions for transport of Fast
Ethernet traffic, with or without companion E1 traffic. Star and ring network topologies are
supported and QoS options meet industry-standards.
Stratex Networks understands the inter-networking industry and its requirements, and is well
positioned to provide the support needed for radio-based solutions.
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Product Description
asynchronous.
- 2 TTL alarm inputs and 4 TTL Form-C relay outputs.
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Product Description
Glossary
802.1p
An IEEE standard for providing QoS traffic prioritization using three bits in the CoS
header (defined in 802.1q) to allow switches to reorder packets based on priority
level.
CoS
DiffServ Differentiated services. A layer-3 protocol which tags each frame, either at the
originating device or at an intermediate point, to identify the requested level of
service.
NTU
PDH
QoS
RSTP
SDH
SONET
STP
TDM
TDMoIP TDM over IP. A technique supporting the emulation of TDM traffic on an IP
connection.
ToS
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Product Description
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