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"Corporate market" refers to enterprise networking and service providers. Enterprise networks Products in this category are Cisco's range of routers, switches, wireless systems, security systems, WAN acceleration hardware, energy and building management systems and media aware network equipment.
Class of service (COS or CoS) is a parameter used in data and voice protocols to differentiate the types of payloads contained in the packet being transmitted. The objective of such differentiation is generally associated with assigning priorities to the data payload or access levels to the telephone call.
Creacode SIP Application Server Real-time SIP call controller and IVR product for carrier-class VoIP networks; Dialogic Corporation Powermedia Media Servers, audio and video SIP IVR, media and conferencing servers for Enterprise and Carriers. Dialexia VoIP Softswitches, IP PBX for medium and enterprise organizations, billing servers.
NetFlow is a feature that was introduced on Cisco routers around 1996 that provides the ability to collect IP network traffic as it enters or exits an interface. By analyzing the data provided by NetFlow, a network administrator can determine things such as the source and destination traffic, class of service, and the causes of congestion.
Class Selector mapping [10] Service class DSCP Name DSCP Value IP precedence Examples of application Standard CS0 (DF) 0 0 (000) NTP [11] Low-priority data CS1 8 1 (001) File transfer (FTP, SMB) Network operations, administration and management (OAM) CS2 16 2 (010) SNMP, SSH, Ping, Telnet, syslog: Broadcast video CS3 24 3 (011)
The majority of companies acquired by Cisco are based in the United States (U.S.) and a total of 149 companies had been acquired as of March 2011. [6] Most of the companies acquired by Cisco are related to computer networking, with several LAN switching and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) companies included in the list of acquisitions. [6]
The type of service (ToS) field is the second byte of the IPv4 header. It has had various purposes over the years, and has been defined in different ways by five RFCs. [1] Prior to the redefinition, the ToS field could specify a datagram's priority and request a route for low-latency, high-throughput, or highly-reliable service.
These are routing and communication protocols developed and maintained by Cisco Systems. Standardized protocols that are deployed in Cisco products are not listed here now. Some standard protocols may be listed here because the page shows that they were developed based on a Cisco proprietary protocol that does not have its own page.