Add Network Traffic Class Rule

The screen creates a traffic class rule to classify the upstream traffic, assigns queuing priority and optionally overwrites the DSCP field and ETH Priority Mark. A rule consists of an order that should be greater than 0 ( an entry with order 0 is a default entry and it's showed first) and at least one condition below. All the specified conditions in this classification rule must be satisfied for the rule to take effect. Most of conditions can be negated selecting the not checkbox in the last column. If the needed protocol is not in the list, please select other choice and fill up other protocol field. If some of the fields are left empty, they will take the values of the default rule. The Default rule can be modified, but not removed. When you edit a rule, the field with default values will be replaced by the real default values. If a rule contains some invalid values, the status will become ERROR. The status is disabled till the DSL line is cabled, then becomes either ENABLE or ERROR. Click 'Save/Apply' to save and activate the rule.

rule value  
Enable  
Order  
 
Assign Destination queue and/or ethprioritymrk and/or DSCP
If non-blank value is selected for 'Mark ethpriority' and/o 'DSCP' , the corresponding byte of the upstream packet will be overwritten by the selected value.

Destination Queue (0-63):
Mark ethPriority:  
Mark DSCP [-2..63]:(-1 don't touch -2 apply table) We can set only the six most meaningful bit of DSCP
 

Specify Traffic Classification Rules

Enter the following conditions either for IP level

 
    exclude
Physical Port:  
Protocol:
Other Protocol: (here U can specify a protocol number and OTHER must be specified as protocol in the field above)  
ethPriority:
Source IP Address:
Source Subnet Mask:    
Source Port (port or port:port):
Destination IP Address:
Destination Subnet Mask:  
Destination Port (port or port:port):
 
 
 
Source MAC Address: (it doesn't work with PORT LOCAL or ANY)
Destination MAC Address: (it works only for bridge filtering)
DSCP CHECK [-1..63] (-1 don't test): Only the six most significant bit are checked