Introduction To Quality of Service (QoS)
Introduction To Quality of Service (QoS)
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Broad introduction to the QoS in Telecom networks
Mechanisms used to satisfy application requirements for
traffic delivery
This course provides basic concepts of quality assurance,
control and management, and builds solid foundations for the
advance topics in this subject.
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Capability of the service providers to provide a
satisfactory service.
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To realize all these things effective QoS schemes are needed.
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A century ago, public switched telephone network (PSTN)
started building out a worldwide.
Circuit switched network; consisted of fixed-bandwidth,
dedicated circuits and ideally was suited to carrying real-time
traffic.
Five decades later, networking experts from military and
educational environments introduced packet-switched
networks.
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Packet-switched networks caused a shift toward
connectionless communication protocols that can handle
packets that might arrive out of order.
Connection-oriented protocols such as X.25 and Systems
Network Architecture (SNA), Frame Relay and Asynchronous
Transfer Mode (ATM) were developed.
Real-time communications such as voice can use virtual
circuits regardless of the underlying networking technology.
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To find a more effective solution which support a combination
of voice and data, integrated services offerings were
introduced.
Integrated Services Digital Network [ISDN] or the IETF
Integrated Services [IntServ] model.
In the late 1990’s, IP was the choice for converged networks
because of its ease of use and advances in handling real-time
traffic.
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The key enablers for IP networks to converge successfully
voice, video, and data over packet-switched infrastructures
were QoS technologies.
QoS allows for the differentiated treatment of data traffic.
As QoS technologies evolved, enterprises saw the value of a
single-network infrastructure and began planning toward
deploying converged networks.
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The first attempt to standardize QoS came in the mid-1990’s.
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) published Integrated
Services Request For Comments (IntServ RFCs).
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In the late 1990’s, QoS techniques became more sophisticated
and were adapted to advanced networking technologies, such
as Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and Virtual Private
Networks (VPNs).
The most recent trend in QoS is simplification and
automation, with the goal of efficiently provisioning
"intelligent" QoS on IP networks.
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