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100
QoS (Quality of Service)
QoS function helps you to control your network traffic for each application from LAN (Ethernet
and/or Wireless) to WAN (Internet).
It facilitates you to control the different quality and speed of
through put for each application when the system is running with full loading of upstream.
You can find two items under the
QoS
section:
Prioritization
and
IP Throttling
(bandwidth
management).
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101
Prioritization
There are three priority settings to be provided in the modem:
High
Normal
(The default is normal priority for all of traffic without setting).
Low
The trigger of check can base on IP protocol, port number and address.
And the balance of utilization of each priorities are High(60%), Normal(30%) and Low(10%).
Enable
: Select it to activate the function.
Application
: A name that identifies an existing rule.
Priority
: High or Low, the priority for existing rule. All of traffic will be set to normal priority
until you change it. The balance of utilizations for each priority is High (60%), Normal (30%)
or Low (10%).
Protocol
: The name of supported protocol.
Source Port
: The source port of packets to be monitored.
Destination Port
: The destination port of packets to be monitored.
Source IP Address Range
: The source IP address or IP range of packets to be monitored.
Destination IP address Range
: The destination IP address or IP range of packets to be
monitored.
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IP Throttling
IP Throttling allows you to limit the speed of IP traffic. The value entered will limit the speed
of the application that you set to the specified value’s multiple of 32kbps.
The trigger of check can base on IP protocol, port number and address as well.
Enable
: Select it to activate the function.
Application
: A name that identifies an existing rule.
Protocol
: The name of supported protocol.
Source Port
: The source port of packets to be monitored.
Destination Port
: The destination port of packets to be monitored.
Source IP Address Range
: The source IP address or IP range of packets to be monitored.
Destination IP address Range
: The destination IP address or IP range of packets to be
monitored.
Upstream Rate Limit
: This function allows you to limit the speed of IP traffic from LAN to
WAN. The value entered will limit the speed of the application that you identified. The speed
can be specified in multiple of 32kbps.
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Virtual Server (“Port Forwarding”)
In TCP/IP and UDP networks a port is a 16-bit number used to identify which application
program (usually a server) incoming connections should be delivered to. Some ports have
numbers that are pre-assigned to them by the IANA (the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority),
and these are referred to as “well-known ports”. Servers follow the well-known port assignments
so clients can locate them.
If you wish to run a server on your network that can be accessed from the WAN (i.e. from other
machines on the Internet that are outside your local network), or any application that can accept
incoming connections (e.g. Peer-to-peer/P2P software such as instant messaging applications
and P2P file-sharing applications) and are using NAT (Network Address Translation), then you
will usually need to configure your router to forward these incoming connection attempts using
specific ports to the PC on your network running the application. You will also need to use port
forwarding if you want to host an online game server.
The reason for this is that when using NAT, your publicly accessible IP address will be used by
and point to your router, which then needs to deliver all traffic to the private IP addresses used
by your PCs. Please see the
WAN
configuration section of this manual for more information on
NAT.
The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) is the central coordinator for the assignment
of unique parameter values for Internet protocols. Port numbers range from 0 to 65535, but only
ports numbers 0 to 1023 are reserved for privileged services and are designated as “well-known
ports”. The registered ports are numbered from 1024 through 49151. The remaining ports,
referred to as dynamic ports or private ports, are numbered from 49152 through 65535.
Examples of well-known and registered port numbers are shown in Table 4, for further
information, please see IANA’s website at:
For help on determining which private port numbers are used by common applications on this
list, please see the FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) at:
Table 4: Well-know and registered Ports
Port Number
Protocol
Description
20
TCP
FTP Data
21
TCP
FTP Control
22
TCP & UDP
SSH Remote Login Protocol
23
TCP
Telnet
25
TCP
SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol)
53
TCP & UDP
DNS (Domain Name Server)
69
UDP
TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol)
80
TCP
World Wide Web HTTP
110
TCP
POP3 (Post Office Protocol Version 3)
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104
119
TCP
NEWS (Network News Transfer Protocol)
123
UDP
NTP (Network Time Protocol)
161
TCP
SNMP
443
TCP & UDP
HTTPS
1503
TCP
T.120
1720
TCP
H.323
4000
TCP
ICQ
7070
UDP
RealAudio
Because NAT can act as a “natural” Internet firewall, your router protects your network from
being accessed by outside users when using NAT, as all incoming connection attempts will
point to your router unless you specifically create Virtual Server entries to forward those ports to
a PC on your network. When your router needs to allow outside users to access internal
servers, e.g. a web server, FTP server, Email server or game server, the router can act as a
“virtual server”. You can set up a local server with a specific port number for the service to use,
e.g. web/HTTP (port 80), FTP (port 21), Telnet (port 23), SMTP (port 25), or POP3 (port 110),
When an incoming access request to the router for a specified port is received, it will be
forwarded to the corresponding internal server.
For example, if you set the port number 80 (Web/HTTP) to be mapped to the IP Address
192.168.1.2, then all incoming HTTP requests from outside users will be forwarded to the local
server (PC) with the IP address of 192.168.1.2. If the port is not listed as a predefined
application, you need to add it manually.

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