Correcting Some Incorrect Claims About Windows XP QoS Support
There
have been claims in various published technical articles and newsgroup
postings that Windows XP always reserves 20 percent of the available
bandwidth for QoS. These claims are incorrect. The information in the
"Clarification about QoS in End Computers That Are Running Windows XP"
section of this article correctly describes the behavior of Windows XP
systems.
Clarification about QoS in End Computers That Are Running Windows XP
As
in Windows 2000, programs can leverage QoS through the QoS application
programming interfaces (APIs) in Windows XP. One hundred percent of the
network bandwidth is available to be shared by all programs unless a
program specifically requests priority bandwidth. This "reserved"
bandwidth is still available to other programs unless the requesting
program is sending data. By default, programs can reserve up to an
aggregate bandwidth of 20 percent of the underlying link speed on each
interface on an end computer. If the program that reserved the bandwidth
is not sending enough data to utilize it completely, the unused portion
of the reserved bandwidth is available for other data flows on the same
host.
For more information about the QoS packet scheduler,
refer to Windows XP Help. Additional information about Windows 2000 QoS
is available in the Windows 2000 technical library.
There really is no need to disable or remove this. You are not going to see any performance drop.
Source: http://tweaks.com
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