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Solve : Unmanaged Switch QoS - 4 Queues Strict Mode?? |
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Answer» Curious if anyone KNOWS how this unmanaged switch QoS sets its priorities. How does it know what needs more bandwidth at times when MULTIPLE devices are drawing hard on the bandwidth? I looked around on google and the only switches with QoS info are managed ONES where you can set specific ports to have a greater priority. Never HEARD of a unmanaged switch with a QoS feature built into it and was looking around because I want to replace my 5-port with an 8-port and this caught my attention (QoS: 4 Queues, strict mode). Switching Fabric: 16Gbps https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817111039&nm_mc=HookLogic&cm_sp=HookLogic-_-Network+-+Switches-_-D-Link-_-17111039 My Vonage VoIP is handled through this Linksys PAP2 https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833124162 and not SURE if it has QoS flagging. No info found on that. My random guess would be that if you have traffic that is already tagged with a VLAN (either through a managed switch elsewhere in the network or on the device itself) then the switch would handle this. That said, you can pick up dirt cheap "smart managed" switches for not much more than a completely unmanaged switch so if you're wanting to do QoS then I'd be inclined to get one of these.Thanks Cameron ... Gonna get a managed switch instead. Further digging it shows that that unmanaged switch would require packets with the QoS flag set by a device etc in order to make use of the QoS feature. I looked into my Vonage VoIP and it has nothing on setting QoS. Only adjustment was to MTU which I left at auto. So managed switch is the way to go and the port that the Vonage VoIP connects to I will set at a higher priority. |
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