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There are 5 modules in this course
Aggressive network traffic can cause serious congestion, disrupting critical applications like voice, video, and interactive services. This course equips you with the expertise to master Cisco’s powerful congestion management and Quality of Service (QoS) tools, ensuring essential applications maintain the performance needed to meet demanding service levels. You’ll learn to configure advanced queuing techniques—including Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ), Class-Based WFQ, and Low Latency Queuing (LLQ)—and discover how to leverage congestion avoidance strategies such as Random Early Detection (RED), Weighted RED (WRED), and Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to minimize packet loss and delay.
A strong focus is placed on practical skills: from policing and shaping traffic to maximize WAN efficiency to optimizing bandwidth for critical flows amid network congestion. Lessons extend to increasingly vital concepts like packet compression, link fragmentation, and interleaving—essential for maintaining performance even on low-speed WAN connections.
This course stands out for its hands-on approach, blending real-world Cisco labs and best practices across the enterprise campus and WAN environments. By the end, you’ll be confident in implementing reliable, cost-effective network solutions that keep business operations running smoothly, even under challenging conditions.
What's included
2 readings
Show info about module content
2 readings•Total 8 minutes
Implementing Cisco Quality of Service - Specialization Introduction•1 minute
Managing Network Traffic with QoS Course Syllabus•7 minutes
Congestion Management
Module 2•2 hours to complete
Module details
Aggressive traffic can fill interface queues and starve more fragile flows such as voice, video, and interactive traffic. The results can be devastating for delay-sensitive traffic types, making it difficult to meet the service-level requirements that these applications require. There are many congestion management techniques available on Cisco platforms that can provide you with an effective means to manage software queues and to allocate the required bandwidth to specific applications when congestion exists. Upon completing this learning content, you will be able to:
• Describe the functions of hardware and software queuing and various commonly used queuing algorithms.
• Configure Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) to manage congestion.
• Configure Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing (CBWFQ) and low latency queuing (LLQ) to manage congestion.
• Describe campus-based techniques to manage congestion.
What's included
13 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
13 readings•Total 83 minutes
Queuing Introduction•10 minutes
Queuing Algorithms•10 minutes
Configure WFQ•5 minutes
WFQ Classification•5 minutes
WFQ Scheduling•7 minutes
Configuring and Monitoring WFQ•7 minutes
Configure CBWFQ•10 minutes
Low Latency Queuing•7 minutes
Monitoring LLQ-CBWFQ•4 minutes
Configure Campus Congestion Management•7 minutes
Catalyst Hardware Queuing (2P6Q3T)•7 minutes
Catalyst 9000 Series Per-Port Policy Allocation•2 minutes
Summary•2 minutes
5 assignments•Total 45 minutes
Knowledge Check - Queuing Introduction•6 minutes
Knowledge Check - Configure WFQ•3 minutes
Knowledge Check - Configure CBWFQ and LLQ•3 minutes
Congestion is a normal occurrence in networks. Whether congestion occurs as a result of a lack of buffer space, network aggregation points, or a low-speed wide-area link, many congestion management techniques exist to ensure that specific applications and traffic classes are given their share of available bandwidth when congestion occurs. When congestion occurs, some traffic is delayed or even dropped at the expense of other traffic. When drops occur, different problems may arise that can exacerbate the congestion, such as retransmissions and TCP global synchronization in TCP/IP networks. Network administrators can use congestion avoidance mechanisms to reduce the negative effects of congestion by penalizing the most aggressive traffic streams as software queues begin to fill.
Different forms of connectivity within a network can have significantly different costs for an organization. Because WAN bandwidth is relatively expensive, many organizations would like to limit the amount of traffic that specific applications can send. This is especially true when enterprise networks use internet connections for connectivity to remote sites and the extranet. Downloading nonbusiness-critical images, music, and movie files can significantly reduce the amount of bandwidth that is available for mission-critical applications. Traffic policing and traffic shaping are two quality of service (QoS) techniques that can limit the amount of bandwidth that a specific application, user, or class of traffic can use on a link. Upon completing this course, you will be able to:
• Explain how traffic policing and traffic shaping can be used to rate-limit traffic.
• Configure class-based policing to rate-limit traffic.
• Describe the implementation options that are available for traffic policing in the campus.
• Configure class-based shaping to rate-limit traffic.
• Given a Frame Relay WAN link, configure class-based shaping to rate-limit traffic.
• Given a Frame Relay WAN link, configure the Frame Relay Voice-Adaptive Traffic Shaping and Fragmentation feature to improve the performance of voice transport.
Traffic Policing and Shaping Course Exam•30 minutes
Link Efficiency Mechanisms
Module 5•1 hour to complete
Module details
In a network that consists of a large WAN covering many sites, the monthly recurring cost of even the smallest link upgrade can be too high. In some cases, the only option for low-bandwidth remote sites is to upgrade their wide-area circuit. In other cases, a set of quality of service (QoS) techniques can be used to improve the efficiency of these low-speed WAN links, which, in this context, typically refer to links with speeds less than or equal to 768 kb/s. Header compression and payload compression mechanisms reduce the sizes of packets, reducing delay and increasing available bandwidth on a link. Other QoS link efficiency techniques, such as link fragmentation and interleaving (LFI), allow fragile traffic types, such as voice and interactive traffic, to be sent either ahead or interleaved with larger, more aggressive flows. These techniques decrease latency and assist in meeting the service-level requirements of delay-sensitive traffic types such as voice.
What's included
11 readings4 assignments
Show info about module content
11 readings•Total 49 minutes
Introduction•4 minutes
Link Efficiency Mechanisms•4 minutes
Example: Indexing Operations•7 minutes
Link Fragmentation and Interleaving•6 minutes
Introduction•2 minutes
Header Compression•8 minutes
Configuring and Monitoring Class-Based Header Compression•4 minutes
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Is financial aid available?
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