This document explains how to configure and troubleshoot the Quality of Service (QoS) enhancements on the Cisco uBR7200 universal broadband router, to support voice and fax traffic. To implement this feature, you need Cisco IOS® Software Release 12.0.7XR2, or a release from the branch 12.1.1T , 12.1(1a)T1, or later.
Readers of this document should have knowledge of these topics:
Data-over-Cable Service Interface Specifications (DOCSIS)
Cisco IOS software
Voice over IP (VoIP)
The information in this document is based on these software and hardware versions:
Cisco IOS Software Release 12.0.7XR2, or a release from the branch 12.1.1T, 12.1(1a)T1, or later.
Cisco uBR7200
DOCSIS-compliant Integrated Telephony Cable Modem (ITCM)
The information in this document was created from the devices in a specific lab environment. All of the devices used in this document started with a cleared (default) configuration. If your network is live, make sure that you understand the potential impact of any command.
For more information on document conventions, refer to the Cisco Technical Tips Conventions.
DOCSIS 1.0+ implementation is DOCSIS 1.0 with QoS extensions for supporting real-time voice, fax, and video on a LAN.
DOCSIS 1.0+ is not a new or intermediate specification by cable labs. The whole DOCSIS 1.0+ architecture is a time-to-market solution provided by Cisco and certain cable modem (CM) vendors until DOCSIS 1.1 specifications and development are widely available.
DOCSIS 1.0+ provides additional QoS features for real-time voice, fax, and data packets from the ITCMs. These are the private extensions added to DOCSIS 1.0 in DOCSIS 1.0+:
Two new CM-initiated dynamic MAC messages: Dynamic Service Addition (DSA) and Dynamic Service Deletion (DSD). These messages allow dynamic Service IDs (SIDs) to be created and deleted at runtime on a per-call basis.
Unsolicited Grant Service (constant bit rate [CBR]-scheduling) on the upstream. This service provides a high quality QoS channel for the upstream CBR voice and fax packets from the ITCM.
For any given ITCM, the ability to provide separate downstream rates is based on the IP-precedence value in the packet. This helps in separating voice, signaling, and data traffic going to the same ITCM for rate-shaping purposes.
When the Cable Modem Termination System (CMTS) receives the registration request, it creates a local database entry for the ITCM. A static SID is immediately assigned to the ITCM for the data service. For the phone line service, the CMTS creates some deferred service flows (for subsequent activation) in the database entry of the ITCM. No SIDs are assigned for the phone line service during registration.
Note: The number of deferred flows created by CMTS for ITCM at the time of registration depends on the value of the Number of Phone Lines parameter provisioned for the cable modem. The value can be any number starting from 0 (for example: 0, 1, 2, 3, and so forth).
ITCM gets a new voice or fax call and determines the QoS parameters for that call using the codec type G.711 or G.729 received from the higher-layer voice-call-signaling protocol.
The ITCM sends a DSA request (DSA-REQ) to the uBR, requesting a new dynamic SID.
CMTS accesses the ITCM’s database information (using the MAC address in the DSA-REQ message) and checks to see if this ITCM has any inactive or unadmitted (deferred) service flow. If the ITCM has an unused deferred flow and if the upstream (US) channel (to which ITCM is connected) has enough capacity to admit a new periodic CBR slot as requested in the DSA-REQ, then a new dynamic SID is created by CMTS.
CMTS responds to the ITCM request with a DSA response (DSA-RSP).
ITCM acknowledges the DSA-RSP. (The CMTS expects a DSA acknowledgment [DSA-ACK] from the ITCM every time it sends a DSA response.)
When the voice or fax call is cleared, ITCM sends a DSD-REQ MAC message to the CMTS, specifying the dynamic SID to be deleted.
CMTS deletes the dynamic SID and sends a DSD-RSP to the ITCM. For more explanation of DOCSIS 1.0+, refer to Frequently Asked Questions on DOCSIS 1.0+.
The example configuration in this document uses this network setup:
Cisco IOS Software Release 12.1(1a)T1 runs on the cable modems and on the Cisco uBR7246.
At the CMTS, two special (voice- and fax-related) QoS profiles are dynamically configured and are available to the CMTS QoS code at any given time. These QoS profiles (G711 and G729) are configured with the special scheduling parameters for G.711 or G.729 type coder-decoders (codecs). The CMTS can obtain the specific parameters—such as grant-size and grant-interval—from the contents of the DSA-REQ message requesting this special scheduling treatment. You must configure QoS profile templates on CMTS for each unique codec parameter combination.
Note: QoS profiles for codecs G.711 and G.729 are dynamically created as soon as you configure phone lines in the configuration file of cable modems. They receive a default grant-interval of 20 milliseconds and a grant-size of 31.22 kbps (for G.729) and 87.2 kbps (for G.711).
This is the output from the show cable qos profile command when at least one phone line is configured in the configuration file of the cable modems:
# show cable qos profile ID Prio Max Guar Max Max TOS TOS Created Privacy IP prec. upstream upstream downstream transmit mask value by B rate bandwidth bandwidth bandwidth burst enabled enabled 3 7 31200 31200 0 0 0x0 0x0 cmts yes no 4 7 87200 87200 0 0 0x0 0x0 cmts yes no
If ITCM vendors use versions of the G.711 or G.729 codecs that are different from those used in that example, you must statically configure QoS profile templates on CMTS for each unique codec parameter combination (unsolicited grant-size and grant-interval).
This table shows you how to calculate the unsolicited grant-size and grant-intervals (for codecs G.711 and G.729):
QoS Profile for G.711 Codec | |
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These are the corresponding numbers for a G.711 QoS profile: | |
Unsolicited grant size | 229 bytes |
Unsolicited grant interval | 20 ms |
Reserved/peak rate | 87.2 kbps |
QoS Profile for G.729 Codec | |
---|---|
This is how you calculate the total size of the DOCSIS cable MAC frame: | |
G.729 codec output per interval | 20 bytes |
Routing Table Protocol (RTP) header | 12 bytes |
User Datagram Protocol (UDP) header | 8 bytes |
IP header | 20 bytes |
Ethernet frame header and cyclic redundancy check (CRC) | 18 bytes |
DOCSIS Cable MAC header | 11 bytes (assuming that the 5 byte privacy extended header is compulsory) |
Total DOCSIS Cable MAC frame size | 89 bytes |
The grant interval of 20 milliseconds directly follows from the framing or packetization delay of the G.729 codec. The upstream reserved rate is obtained by only considering the Ethernet-level bandwidth usage of each G.729 codec output. This works out to a 78-byte Ethernet frame every 20 milliseconds, which equals 31.2 kbps. |
In the Troubleshooting and Tips section, an example is provided to show you what happens in debug output if the grant-size or the grant-interval is not correctly specified for the codec used.
You can check your modulation profiles using the show cable qos profile x verbose command.
You can change the modulation profile to maximize the number of voice calls that you can get per upstream channel. This is a modulation profile that you can use:
cable modulation-profile 5 !--- This configuration line is entered on one line: cable modulation-profile 5 short 2 52 35 8 qpsk scrambler 152 diff 72 shortened uw8 interface Cable3/0 cable upstream 5 minislot-size 4 cable upstream 5 modulation-profile 5
Configuration of CMTS |
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cable modulation-profile 5 request 0 16 1 8 qpsk scrambler 152 no-diff 64 fixed uw16 cable modulation-profile 5 initial 5 34 0 48 qpsk scrambler 152 no-diff 128 fixed uw16 cable modulation-profile 5 station 5 34 0 48 qpsk scrambler 152 no-diff 128 fixed uw16 cable modulation-profile 5 short 6 75 6 8 16qam scrambler 152 no-diff 144 fixed uw8 cable modulation-profile 5 long 8 220 0 8 16qam scrambler 152 no-diff 160 fixed uw8 cable qos profile 5 ip-precedence 5 max-downstream 128 no cable qos permission update !--- This command was created automatically during CM registration; !--- no cable qos permission creates 2 phone lines with IP precedence 5 and !--- with 128K for max downstream, as specified in CM configuration file. cable qos permission modems cable time-server ! interface Ethernet2/0 ip address 10.200.68.3 255.255.255.0 ! interface Cable3/0 ip address 10.200.70.17 255.255.255.240 secondary ip address 10.200.69.1 255.255.255.240 no keepalive cable downstream annex B cable downstream modulation 64qam cable downstream interleave-depth 32 cable upstream 0 shutdown cable upstream 1 shutdown cable upstream 2 shutdown cable upstream 3 shutdown cable upstream 4 shutdown cable upstream 5 frequency 30000000 cable upstream 5 power-level 0 cable upstream 5 minislot-size 4 cable upstream 5 modulation-profile 5 no cable upstream 5 shutdown cable dhcp-giaddr policy cable helper-address 10.200.68.11 ! ip classless |
Prepare the configuration file for cable modems using the DOCSIS customer premises equipment (CPE) Configurator. Specify the number of phone lines that you want. For the Cisco uBR924 cable modem, this value can be 0, 1, or 2, where 0 represents data-only with no voice ports and where 1 and 2 represent the number of phones. Specify the IP precedence settings used for separating voice and signaling from data and the rate limit.
In this example, the voice-transport precedence value (4) is set to a downstream rate limit of 128 kbps:
Value = 4; Rate Limit (kps) = 128000
Configure the dial peers and specify the IP precedence that you want to use for voice and fax traffic.
Configuration for Cable Modem 1 |
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voice-port 0 input gain -2 cptone xx ! voice-port 1 input gain -2 cptone xx ! ! dial-peer voice 1 pots destination-pattern 444 port 0 ! dial-peer voice 2 voip destination-pattern 555 session-target ipv4:10.200.69.3 !--- IP address of CM2’s cable interface. ip precedence 5 |
Configuration for Cable Modem 2 |
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voice-port 0 input gain -2 cptone xx ! voice-port 1 input gain -2 cptone xx ! ! dial-peer voice 1 pots destination-pattern 555 port 0 ! dial-peer voice 2 voip destination-pattern 444 session target ipv4:10.200.69.10 !--- IP address of CM1’s cable interface. ip precedence 5 |
This section provides useful debug and show commands for troubleshooting your configuration.
Note: Before issuing debug commands, refer to Important Information on Debug Commands.
Certain show commands are supported by the Output Interpreter Tool (registered customers only) , which allows you to view an analysis of show command output.
These are some useful debug commands:
debug cable dynsrv—To debug all dynamic MAC messages (such as DSA-REQ, DSA-RSP, DSA-ACK, DSD-REQ, DSD-RSP) handling at the CMTS.
debug cable scheduler unsolicited-grants—To debug the average delay and maximum delay jitter on the unsolicited grants received.
debug cable scheduler admission-control—To see the MAC scheduler’s attempt to admit and unadmit a CBR slot.
Note: The new debug commands can only be enabled per interface or per SID. This makes the debug more manageable. Do not forget to enable debug cable interface cable x/y or debug cable interface cable x/y SID with each debug that you want.
These are some useful show commands:
show interfaces cable x/y SID
show interfaces cable x/y upstream n
show cable qos profile
show cable qos profile z verbose
Make a phone call from CM1 to CM2 and analyze what happens:
big-cmts# debug cable dynsrv CMTS dynsrv debugging is on big-cmts# debug cable interface cable 3/0 !--- Each of these timestamped lines of output appear on one line: *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-REQ-RECD: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->52 *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSx-STATE-CREATED: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->52 *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-REQ TLV Information: *May 5 05:15:36.531: Type Subtype Subtype Length Value *May 5 05:15:36.531: 24 10 *May 5 05:15:36.531: 19 2 89 *May 5 05:15:36.531: 20 4 20000 *May 5 05:15:36.531: 80 69 *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-REQ: Requested QoS Parameter Information: *May 5 05:15:36.531: Srv Flow Ref: 0 Grant Size: 89 Grant Intvl: 20000 *May 5 05:15:36.531: Requested QoS parameters match QoS Profile:3 (G729) *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-REQ-SID-ASSIGNED: CM 0050.734e.b5b1 SID 11 *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-RSP-SEND: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->52 *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-RSP msg TLVs *May 5 05:15:36.531: Type:Length:Value *May 5 05:15:36.531: US QoS Encodings 24:8 *May 5 05:15:36.531: SID 3:2:11 *May 5 05:15:36.531: Service Flow Reference 1:2:0 *May 5 05:15:36.531: DSA-RSP hex dump: *May 5 05:15:36.531: 0x0000: C2 00 00 26 00 00 00 50 73 4E B5 B1 00 10 0B AF *May 5 05:15:36.531: 0x0010: BC 54 00 14 00 00 03 01 10 00 00 34 00 18 08 03 *May 5 05:15:36.531: 0x0020: 02 00 0B 01 02 00 00 00 *May 5 05:15:36.535: DSA-RSP-SENT: CM->0050.734e.b5b1 TranscId->52 *May 5 05:15:36.539: DSA-ACK-RECD: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->52 ConfCode->0 *May 5 05:15:36.539: DYN-SRV-STATE-DESTROYED : OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->52 *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-REQ-RECD: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->51 *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSx-STATE-CREATED: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->51 *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-REQ TLV Information: *May 5 05:15:42.779: Type Subtype Subtype Length Value *May 5 05:15:42.779: 24 10 *May 5 05:15:42.779: 19 2 89 *May 5 05:15:42.779: 20 4 20000 *May 5 05:15:42.779: 80 69 *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-REQ: Requested QoS Parameter Information: *May 5 05:15:42.779: Srv Flow Ref: 0 Grant Size: 89 Grant Intvl: 20000 *May 5 05:15:42.779: Requested QoS parameters match QoS Profile:3 (G729) !--- If the configured Unsolicited Grant size or Unsolicited Grant interval !--- are not correct. *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-REQ-SID-ASSIGNED: CM 0050.7366.1bdb SID 12 !--- You see “Requested QoS doesn't match any profile” here. *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-RSP-SEND: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->51 !--- TIP: check the configured QoS Profile with the !--- show qos profile x verbose command. *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-RSP MSG TLVs *May 5 05:15:42.779: Type:Length:Value !--- Also, if you forgot to specify the number of phone lines you want !--- in CM config file. *May 5 05:15:42.779: US QoS Encodings 24:8 !--- You see “QoS profile matched but DSA-REQ is rejected” here. *May 5 05:15:42.779: SID 3:2:12 *May 5 05:15:42.779: Service Flow Reference 1:2:0 *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-RSP hex dump: *May 5 05:15:42.779: 0x0000: C2 00 00 26 00 00 00 50 73 66 1B DB 00 10 0B AF *May 5 05:15:42.779: 0x0010: BC 54 00 14 00 00 03 01 10 00 00 33 00 18 08 03 *May 5 05:15:42.779: 0x0020: 02 00 0C 01 02 00 00 00 *May 5 05:15:42.779: DSA-RSP-SENT: CM->0050.7366.1bdb TranscId->51 *May 5 05:15:42.787: DSA-ACK-RECD: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->51 ConfCode->0 *May 5 05:15:42.787: DYN-SRV-STATE-DESTROYED : OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->51 cmts# show interfaces cable 3/0 SID SID Prim Type Online Admin QoS Create IP Address MAC Address SID State Status Time 1 stat online enable 5 04:26:35 10.200.69.3 0050.734e.b5b1 2 stat online enable 5 04:26:47 10.200.69.10 0050.7366.1bdb 13 1 dyn enable 3 05:22:20 14 2 dyn enable 3 05:22:20
Two dynamic SIDs have been created for the voice call. They use QoS ID 3, which is the G729 profile.
cmts# show cable qos profile ID Prio Max Guar Max Max TOS TOS Created Privacy IP prec. upstream upstream downstream transmit mask value by B rate bandwidth bandwidth bandwidth burst enabled enabled 1 0 0 0 0 0 0x0 0x0 cmts(r) no no 2 0 64000 0 1000000 0 0x0 0x0 cmts(r) no no 3* 7 32000 320000 0 0 0x0 0x0 cmts yes no 4** 7 87200 87200 0 0 0x0 0x0 cmts yes no 5 1 1000000 0 2000000 1600 0x0 0x0 cm no yes !--- * Profile for the G.729 codec. !--- ** Profile for the G.711 codec.
For downstream traffic, you still use the primary SID (profile for data) and the corresponding QoS profile. (The IP precedence rate limiting provides a form of differentiation between voice and data. It is enabled for the downstream QoS profile number 5.)
Within DOCSIS 1.0+, the IP precedence settings are used for separating voice and signaling from data. In the case of a call where one endpoint is outside of the cable network, it is the responsibility of the “outside” network to ensure that all voice packets are appropriately colored before forwarding them to the CMTS. In the case of a call where both endpoints are on the cable network, it is the responsibility of the endpoint (customer) originating the traffic to color the voice packets before launching them into the network.
Note: You can use the IP ToS overwrite command (available since early uBR7200 releases) to set a non-default type of service (ToS) value in upstream packets received on SIDs belonging to CBR profiles. That way, an operator can be sure that packets received on dynamic CBR SIDs will have the right pattern before they are forwarded into the WAN link by the uBR7200 (this protects against ITCM doing any wrong coloring).
Consider this example:
cmts(config)# cable qos profile 3 tos-overwrite 0xE0 0xA0 value : 0xA0 !--- First 3 bits of ToS field: 101, which is an IP precedence of 5. mask : 0xE0 !--- Remember that IP precedence uses the first 3 bits of the ToS field !--- from the IPv4 header. big-cmts# show interfaces cable 3/0 upstream 5 Cable3/0: Upstream 5 is up Received 254 broadcasts, 0 multicasts, 20229 unicasts 0 discards, 66907 errors, 0 unknown protocol 20483 packets input, 1 uncorrectable 101 noise, 0 microreflections Total Modems On This Upstream Channel : 2 (2 active) Default MAC scheduler Queue[Rng Polls] 0/20, fifo queueing, 0 drops Queue[Cont Mslots] 0/104, FIFO queueing, 1 drop Queue[CIR Grants] 0/20, fair queueing, 0 drops Queue[BE Grants] 0/30, fair queueing, 0 drops Queue[Grant Shpr] 0/30, calendar queueing, 0 drops Reserved slot table currently has 2 CBR entries Req IEs 3645087, Req/Data IEs 0 Init Mtn IEs 56729, Stn Mtn IEs 3196 Long Grant IEs 80084, Short Grant IEs 202 Avg upstream channel utilization : 4% Avg percent contention slots : 92% Avg percent initial ranging slots : 4% Avg percent minislots lost on late MAPs : 0% Total channel bw reserved 64000 bps CIR admission control not enforced Current minislot count : 3101850 Flag: 0 Scheduled minislot count : 3102029 Flag: 0 cmts# debug cable scheduler CMTS scheduler debugging is on big-cmts# show debug *May 5 05:24:41.991: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:0 msecs *May 5 05:24:51.995: SID:14 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:1 msecs *May 5 05:25:02.015: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:0 msecs *May 5 05:25:12.035: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:1 msecs *May 5 05:25:22.055: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:0 msecs *May 5 05:25:32.075: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:0 msecs *May 5 05:25:42.091: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:0 msecs *May 5 05:25:52.095: SID:13 max-jitter:2 msecs, avg-jitter:0 msecs cmts# show cable qos profile 3 verbose Profile Index 3 Name G729 Upstream Traffic Priority 7 Upstream Maximum Rate (BPS) 32000 Upstream Guaranteed Rate (BPS) 32000 Unsolicited Grant Size (bytes) 89 Unsolicited Grant Interval (usecs) 20000 Upstream Maximum Transmit Burst (bytes) 0 IP Type of Service Overwrite Mask 0x0 IP Type of Service Overwrite Value 0x0 Downstream Maximum Rate (BPS) 0 Created By cmts Baseline Privacy Enabled yes big-cmts# show cable qos profile 4 verbose Profile Index 4 Name G711 Upstream Traffic Priority 7 Upstream Maximum Rate (BPS) 87200 Upstream Guaranteed Rate (BPS) 87200 Unsolicited Grant Size (bytes) 229 Unsolicited Grant Interval (usecs) 20000 Upstream Maximum Transmit Burst (bytes) 0 IP Type of Service Overwrite Mask 0x0 IP Type of Service Overwrite Value 0x0 Downstream Maximum Rate (BPS) 0 Created By cmts Baseline Privacy Enabled yes Line is released: The phone line is released: a user hangs up. big-cmts# show debug CMTS: CMTS dynsrv debugging is on CMTS specific: Debugging is on for Cable3/0 big-cmts# show debug !--- Each of these timestamped lines of output appear on one line: *May 5 05:29:45.659: DSD-REQ-RECD: I/F Cable3/0/U5: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 *May 5 05:29:45.659: OrgId->54 sfid 13 *May 5 05:29:45.659: DYN-SID-DELETED: SID:13 Inpkts:5047 InOctets:393749 Bwreqs:12 Grants:22270 *May 5 05:29:45.659: DSD-RSP Message Hex Dump: *May 5 05:29:45.659: 0x0000: C2 00 00 20 00 00 00 50 73 4E B5 B1 00 10 0B AF *May 5 05:29:45.659: 0x0010: BC 54 00 0E 00 00 03 01 16 00 00 36 00 00 00 00 *May 5 05:29:45.659: 0x0020: 00 0D *May 5 05:29:45.659: DSD-RSP-SENT: To CM->0050.734e.b5b1 TranscId->54 *May 5 05:29:48.023: DSD-REQ-RECD: I/F Cable3/0/U5: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb *May 5 05:29:48.023: OrgId->53 sfid 14 *May 5 05:29:48.023: DYN-SID-DELETED: SID:14 Inpkts:6512 InOctets:508085 Bwreqs:2 Grants:22378 !--- The dynamic SIDs are deleted. *May 5 05:29:48.023: DSD-RSP Message Hex Dump: *May 5 05:29:48.023: 0x0000: C2 00 00 20 00 00 00 50 73 66 1B dB 00 10 0B AF *May 5 05:29:48.023: 0x0010: BC 54 00 0E 00 00 03 01 16 00 00 35 00 00 00 00 *May 5 05:29:48.023: 0x0020: 00 0E *May 5 05:29:48.023: DSD-RSP-SENT: To CM->0050.7366.1bdb TranscId->53
The next output shows what happens if one of these parameters (grant-size or grant-interval for the codec you want to use) is misconfigured. In this example, we change the grant-size for profile G729 from 89 to 80:
cmts(config)# cable qos profile 3 grant-size 80 cmts# show cable qos profile 3 verbose Profile Index 3 Name G729 Upstream Traffic Priority 7 Upstream Maximum Rate (BPS) 31200 Upstream Guaranteed Rate (BPS) 31200 Unsolicited Grant Size (bytes) 80 Unsolicited Grant Interval (usecs) 20000 Upstream Maximum Transmit Burst (bytes) 0 IP Type of Service Overwrite Mask 0x0 IP Type of Service Overwrite Value 0x0 Downstream Maximum Rate (BPS) 0 Created By cmts Baseline Privacy Enabled yes big-cmts# show debug !--- Each of these timestamped lines of output appear on one line: *May 10 04:20:57.885: DSA-REQ-RECD: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->59 *May 10 04:20:57.885: DSx-STATE-CREATED: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->59 *May 10 04:20:57.885: DSA-REQ TLV Information: *May 10 04:20:57.885: Type Subtype Subtype Length Value *May 10 04:20:57.885: 24 10 *May 10 04:20:57.885: 19 2 89 *May 10 04:20:57.885: 20 4 20000 *May 10 04:20:57.885: 80 69 *May 10 04:20:57.885: DSA-REQ: Requested QoS Parameter Information: *May 10 04:20:57.885: Srv Flow Ref: 0 Grant Size: 89 Grant Intvl: 20000 *May 10 04:20:57.885: DSA-REQ-REJECT OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->59: *May 10 04:20:57.885: No CMTS QoS profile matching requested parameters !--- Request is rejected, because there is no QoS profile. *May 10 04:20:57.885: DSA-RSP-SENT: CM->0050.734e.b5b1 TranscId->59 *May 10 04:20:57.889: DSA-ACK-RECD: OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->59 ConfCode->0 *May 10 04:20:57.889: DYN-SRV-STATE-DESTROYED : OrgMac->0050.734e.b5b1 OrgId->59 !--- The state is destroyed. *May 10 04:20:57.905: DSA-REQ-RECD: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->58 *May 10 04:20:57.905: DSx-STATE-CREATED: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->58 *May 10 04:20:57.905: DSA-REQ TLV Information: *May 10 04:20:57.905: Type Subtype Subtype Length Value *May 10 04:20:57.905: 24 10 *May 10 04:20:57.905: 19 2 89 *May 10 04:20:57.905: 20 4 20000 *May 10 04:20:57.905: 80 69 *May 10 04:20:57.905: DSA-REQ: Requested QoS Parameter Information: *May 10 04:20:57.905: Srv Flow Ref: 0 Grant Size: 89 Grant Intvl: 20000 *May 10 04:20:57.905: DSA-REQ-REJECT OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->58: *May 10 04:20:57.905: No CMTS QoS profile matching requested parameters *May 10 04:20:57.909: DSA-RSP-SENT: CM->0050.7366.1bdb TranscId->58 *May 10 04:20:57.913: DSA-ACK-RECD: OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb OrgId->58 ConfCode->0 *May 10 04:20:57.913: DYN-SRV-STATE-DESTROYED : OrgMac->0050.7366.1bdb Org big-cmts# show interfaces cable 3/0 upstream 5 Cable3/0: Upstream 5 is up !--- Output suppressed. Reserved slot table currently has 0 CBR entries !--- Output suppressed.