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I know what is QoS and don't need general explanations of the term and opinions on what is "QoS packet scheduler" based just on its name.

What I am looking for is information on what exactly does Windows "QoS packet scheduler" affect (I suspect it does nothing useful unless there is at least router-side support for its function).

Do you happen to know?

Giacomo1968
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Ivan
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2 Answers2

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Try this Microsoft KB on Windows XP Quality of Service (QoS) enhancements and behavior.
and this SevenForums discussion referring it.

From a recent article,

20% of your bandwidth is reserved only when QoS tasks are running. When no QoS task is running, by default you have access to 100% of your bandwidth. So by going forward with removing the 20% reserve, essentially you wouldn't be recovering all 20% of your bandwidth; you would be recovering the piece of the 20% that is wasted and unused when a QoS task is running.

All this basically says, you are on the right track not worrying about its effects.

nik
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It actually does something useful even without router support. It reserves outbound bandwidth for particular traffic streams and determines which packets the machine transmits based on their QoS bits.