RE: [EFM] Performance monitoring, installation, trouble shoot ing.
Matt
I agree and furthermore I would asert that the OAM transport of EFM should
operate reliably under all possible boundary conditions without dependancy
on other 802 mechaisms which would make the OAM transport dependent on
implementation specific elements. This is the Etbernet / 802 way is it not?
Service providers test systems under boundary conditions as well as 'normal'
conditions, and they want the management to work at all times.
I have been at an ILEC test lab this week. The first thing the test guys
said to me about management was that it must do loopback. The next things
was that using CRC for BERT is not acceptable as that means the kit looks at
the payload. TRUE!! They took work all the time as a given. I asked them to
come to the March meeting and repeat those statements. Their travel budget
might not allow it but I will request a letter or an email to the group from
them.
Any ILEC people out there please activily agree or disagree with these
views - thanks.
Best regards
Bob
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-stds-802-3-efm@majordomo.ieee.org
[mailto:owner-stds-802-3-efm@majordomo.ieee.org]On Behalf Of Matt Squire
Sent: 24 January 2002 16:11
To: joey.chou@intel.com; stds-802-3-efm-oam@ieee.org
Cc: stds-802-3-efm@ieee.org
Subject: RE: [EFM] RE: [EFM-OAM] Performance monitoring, installation,
trouble shoot ing.
Speaking only for myself...
802.3 defines an Ethernet link, not a network, and Ethernet links have
no intrinsic QoS mechanisms. What 802.1D or IP or anyone else does as
far as prioirty queueing in order to gain access to this link is a
problem thats important to address - but not here.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chou, Joey [mailto:joey.chou@xxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2002 6:01 PM
> To: carlosal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Geoff Thompson
> Cc: bob.barrett@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; mattsquire@xxxxxxx;
> stds-802-3-efm-oam@ieee.org; stds-802-3-efm@ieee.org
> Subject: [EFM] RE: [EFM-OAM] Performance monitoring, installation,
> trouble shoot ing.
>
>
>
> Geoff and Carlos,
>
> End-to-end QoS is required, if the IP networks were to
> support the mix of
> real-time (e.g. voice, video) and non-real-time(e.g. data)
> applications. It
> is true that several mechanisms, such as Diffserv, RSVP,
> MPLS, have been
> designed in the upper layers to support QoS. However, the
> true end-to-end
> QoS will not happen until QoS is supported in every network
> segment along
> the path. 802.1D user_priority uses 3 bits in the 802.1Q VLAN
> tag to define
> 8 types of traffic riding in the Ethernet frame.
>
> I thought there should be a need for an OAM requirement to
> support 802.1D
> user_priority bits to prevent voice packets from blocking by
> huge Ethernet
> data packets.
>
> Regards,
>
> Joey Chou
> Intel
>