Integrated Services QoS – Hard QoS is first QoS approach, but currently we are not using. At the end of this post, you will know what is Integrated QoS, what was the idea with it and why it is not used today.
Quality of service (QoS) is the overall performance of a telephony or computer network, particularly the performance seen by the users of the network.
Two QoS approaches have been defined by standard organizations.
These are:
- Intserv (Integrated Services) and
- Diffserv (Differentiated Services).
Intserv QoS demands that every flow requests a bandwidth from the network and that the network would reserve the required bandwidth for the user during a conversation.
Think of this as on-demand circuit switching, each flow of each user would be remembered by the network. This clearly would create a resource problem (CPU, memory , bandwidth) on the network, and thus it was never widely adopted.
Not only allocation bandwidth for each and every flow on each network device in the path, but also keep tracking these flows and tearing down when the flow is terminated is very resource intensive and people thought this will not be scalable and we haven’t seen deployment for it.