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tc-drr(8)
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TC(8)				     Linux				 TC(8)

NAME
       drr - deficit round robin scheduler

SYNOPSIS
       tc qdisc ... add drr [ quantum bytes ]


DESCRIPTION
       The Deficit Round Robin Scheduler is a classful queuing discipline as a
       more flexible replacement for Stochastic Fairness Queuing.

       Unlike SFQ, there are no built-in queues -- you need to add classes and
       then set up filters to classify packets accordingly.  This can be
       useful e.g. for using RED qdiscs with different settings for particular
       traffic. There is no default class -- if a packet cannot be classified,
       it is dropped.


ALGORITHM
       Each class is assigned a deficit counter, initialized to quantum.

       DRR maintains an (internal) ''active'' list of classes whose qdiscs are
       non-empty. This list is used for dequeuing. A packet is dequeued from
       the class at the head of the list if the packet size is smaller or
       equal to the deficit counter. If the counter is too small, it is
       increased by quantum and the scheduler moves on to the next class in
       the active list.



PARAMETERS
       quantum
	      Amount of bytes a flow is allowed to dequeue before the
	      scheduler moves to the next class. Defaults to the MTU of the
	      interface. The minimum value is 1.


EXAMPLE & USAGE
       To attach to device eth0, using the interface MTU as its quantum:

       # tc qdisc add dev eth0 handle 1 root drr

       Adding two classes:

       # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1: classid 1:1 drr
       # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1: classid 1:2 drr

       You also need to add at least one filter to classify packets.

       # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol .. classid 1:1

       Like SFQ, DRR is only useful when it owns the queue -- it is a pure
       scheduler and does not delay packets. Attaching non-work-conserving
       qdiscs like tbf to it does not make sense -- other qdiscs in the active
       list will also become inactive until the dequeue operation succeeds.
       Embed DRR within another qdisc like HTB or HFSC to ensure it owns the
       queue.

       You can mimic SFQ behavior by assigning packets to the attached classes
       using the flow filter:

       tc qdisc add dev .. drr

       for i in .. 1024;do
	    tc class add dev .. classid $handle:$(print %x $i)
	    tc qdisc add dev .. fifo limit 16
       done

       tc filter add .. protocol ip .. $handle flow hash keys
       src,dst,proto,proto-src,proto-dst divisor 1024 perturb 10



SOURCE
       o      M. Shreedhar and George Varghese "Efficient Fair Queuing using
	      Deficit Round Robin", Proc. SIGCOMM 95.


NOTES
       This implementation does not drop packets from the longest queue on
       overrun, as limits are handled by the individual child qdiscs.


SEE ALSO
       tc(8), tc-htb(8), tc-sfq(8)


AUTHOR
       sched_drr was written by Patrick McHardy.

iproute2			 January 2010				 TC(8)

tc-drr(8)

drr \- deficit round robin scheduler

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System Information

iproute2 1.0.0
Updated January 2010
Maintained by Unknown

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