Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
RFC 2597 Rate Yes per DSCP Real-time interactive CS4 32 Police using sr+bs RFC 2474 Rate No Multimedia streaming AF31, AF32, AF33 26, 28, 30 Using two-rate, three-color marker (such as RFC 2698) RFC 2597 Rate Yes per DSCP Broadcast video: CS3 24: Police using sr+bs: RFC 2474: Rate: No OAM: CS2 16: Police using sr+bs: RFC 2474: Rate: Yes ...
RFC 2474 (which was released in December 1998) reserved the first six bits of the DS (or IPv4 ToS) field for the Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP), and RFC 3168 reserved the last two bits for Explicit Congestion Notification.
This is a partial list of RFCs (request for comments memoranda). A Request for Comments (RFC) is a publication in a series from the principal technical development and standards-setting bodies for the Internet, most prominently the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
The RFC series contains three sub-series for IETF RFCs: BCP, FYI, and STD. Best Current Practice (BCP) is a sub-series of mandatory IETF RFCs not on standards track. For Your Information (FYI) is a sub-series of informational RFCs promoted by the IETF as specified in RFC 1150 (FYI 1). In 2011, RFC 6360 obsoleted FYI 1 and concluded this sub-series.
The IETF has also published Baker, Fred; Babiarz, Jozef; Chan, Kwok Ho (August 2006), Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes, doi: 10.17487/RFC4594, RFC 4594 as an informative or best practices document about the practical aspects of designing a QoS solution for a DiffServ network. The document tries to identify applications ...
Guidelines for Writing RFC Text on Security Considerations BCP106: Randomness Requirements for Security BCP136: Secure Connectivity and Mobility Using Mobile IPv4 and IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming (MOBIKE) BCP140: Preventing Use of Recursive Nameservers in Reflector Attacks BCP188: Pervasive Monitoring Is an Attack BCP194: BGP Operations and ...
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) is an extension to the Internet Protocol and to the Transmission Control Protocol and is defined in RFC 3168 (2001). ECN allows end-to-end notification of network congestion without dropping packets. ECN is an optional feature that may be used between two ECN-enabled endpoints when the underlying network ...