You can use the quality of service (QoS) monitor to analyze your IP traffic through the server.
This helps to determine where congestion is occurring within your network. Not only is this useful during QoS planning, but it can also be helpful as a troubleshooting tool. The QoS monitor can help you continue to monitor your network so you can adjust your policies as needed. To monitor all active policies, select Monitor, the monitor will only display information for that one policy.
from the QoS Configuration Server window. If you right-click a single policy and selectYou can use the monitor policies in the following ways:
When you open the monitor, real-time data is always displayed on active policies. There is no need to start data collection.
If you want to save monitor results, then you need to start QoS data collection. The monitor continues to collect data until you stop the collection. Closing the monitor window does not stop the data collection. You can also change the properties that the monitor uses when collecting data. On the QoS Monitor window, highlight QoS monitor and select File-->Properties to change your options. Use the online help for additional information.
If QoS data collection is turned on and monitor properties are changed, then you must perform the following steps to ensure that the changes are reflected in data collection.
The output information you receive depends on the type of policy you are monitoring. Remember the types of policies: DiffServ, IntServ (Controlled Load), IntServ (Guaranteed), and Inbound admission. The fields to evaluate depend on the policy type. The most interesting values are the values that show a measurement. The following fields are measured rather than given a definition: accepted requests, active connections, connections services, connection rates, dropped requests, in-profile packets, in-profile bits, out-of-profile bits, total bits, total packets, and total requests.
By reading information from the measured fields above, you can form a good picture of how your network traffic is conforming to your policies. Use the descriptions below for more detailed information about the monitor output field for each policy type. See any of the QoS scenarios for a sample of how to use the monitor along with the QoS policies.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Policy name | The name you assigned to this policy. |
Protocol | UDP, TCP, ALL |
Average token rate limit | The average token rate allowed by this policy in each router and server along the flow path. |
Token depth limit | The maximum token buffer size allowed by this policy in each router and server along the flow path. |
Peak token rate limit | The maximum rate allowed by this connection. |
Packets in-profile | The number of transmitted IP packets that fit within this policy's parameters. |
Bits in-profile | The number of transmitted bits that fit within this policy's parameters. |
Bits out-of-profile | The number of transmitted bits that exceed the policy's parameters. |
Bits rate | The measured number of bits permitted by this connection. |
Active connections | The total number of active connections. |
Traffic profile | The type of packet conditioning used on out-of-profile packets. Format might include:
|
Bits total | The number of transmitted bits used by this policy from the time it was started to the time of the monitor collection. |
Codepoint in-profile | If the packet is remarked with a new codepoint, this is the codepoint which IP packets will use if they fit within this policy's parameters. |
Codepoint out-of-profile | If the packet is remarked with a new codepoint, this is the codepoint which the IP packets will use if they exceed the policy's parameters. |
Destination address range | The address range which determines the packets' (controlled by this policy)destination point. |
Packet total | The number of packets transmitted by this policy from the time the policy started to the time of the monitor collection. |
Source port range | The source port range which determines which applications are controlled by this policy. |
IntServ policies do not display in the monitor until the applications are running and reservations have been established. If your IntServ policies have more than one reservation, you will see multiple entries in the monitor.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Policy name | The name you assigned to this policy. |
Protocol | UDP or TCP |
Destination address | The address range which determines the packets' (controlled by this policy)destination point. |
Average token rate limit | The average token rate allowed by this policy in each router and server along the connection path. |
Token depth limit | The maximum token buffer size allowed by this policy in each router and server along the connection path. |
Peak token rate limit | The maximum rate allowed by this connection. |
Packet total | The number of packets transmitted by this policy from the time the policy started to the time of the monitor collection. |
Bits out-of-profile | The number of transmitted bits that exceed the policy's parameters. |
Bits total | The number of transmitted bits used by this policy from the time it was started to the time of the monitor collection. |
Bit rate | The measured number of bits permitted by this connection. |
Bits in-profile | The number of transmitted bits that fit within this policy's parameters. |
Maximum packet size | The maximum allowed packet size controlled by this policy. |
Minimum policed unit | The smallest number of bits that will be removed from the token bucket. For example, if your minimum policed unit is 100 bits, packets under 100 bits will still be removed at 100 bits. |
Packets in-profile | The number of transmitted IP packets that fit within this policy's parameters. |
Source port range | The source port range which determines which applications are controlled by this policy. |
IntServ policies do not display in the monitor until the applications are running and reservations have been established. If your IntServ policies have more than one reservation, you will see multiple entries in the monitor.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Policy name | The name you assigned to this policy. |
Protocol | UDP or TCP |
Destination address | The address range which determines the packets' (controlled by this policy)destination point. |
Average token rate limit | The maximum token rate allowed by this policy in each router and server along the connection path. |
Token depth limit | The maximum token buffer size allowed by this policy in each router and server along the connection path. |
Peak token rate limit | The maximum rate allowed by this connection. |
Packet total | The number of packets transmitted by this policy from the time the policy started to the time of the monitor collection. |
Bits total | The number of transmitted bits used by this policy from the time it was started to the time of the monitor collection. |
Bits out-of-profile | The number of transmitted bits that exceed the policy's parameters. |
Guaranteed rate | The guaranteed rate in bits per second. |
Bits in-profile | The number of transmitted bits that fit within this policy's parameters. |
Maximum packet size | The maximum allowed packet size controlled by this policy. |
Minimum policed units | The smallest number of bits that will be removed from the token bucket. For example, if your minimum policed unit is 100 bits, packets under 100 bits will still be removed at 100 bits. |
Packets in-profile | The number of transmitted IP packets that fit within this policy's parameters. |
Slack term | The difference (in seconds) between the required delay and the delay obtained. |
Source port range | The source port range which determines which applications are controlled by this policy. |
Field | Description |
---|---|
Policy name | The name you assigned to this policy. |
Connection rate | The number of connection requests accepted per second. |
Total requests | The total number of connection requests made to this server. |
Accepted requests | The total number of connection requests accepted by this server. |
Dropped requests | The total number of requests dropped by this server. |
Average connection rate limit | The average allowable number of new connection requests admitted per second. |
Connection burst limit | The maximum number of new connection requests accepted concurrently. |
Peak connection rate limit | The maximum allowable rate at which the server will accept connections from the network. |
Priority | The priority assigned to each rule loaded in the QoS Manager. |
Queue Priority | The priority assigned to incoming connections placed in the listen queue. |
Destination port range | The port range or port to which traffic is destined on your server. |
Interface address | IP address of system interface being monitored. |
Source address range | The IP address range of the clients sending requests to your server. |
Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) | The identity of the URI being policed. |