doc-exports/docs/eip/umn/bandwidth_0002.html
Qin Ying, Fan 1e074c969a EIP UMN 20240126 version
Reviewed-by: Sarda, Priya <prsarda@noreply.gitea.eco.tsi-dev.otc-service.com>
Co-authored-by: Qin Ying, Fan <fanqinying@huawei.com>
Co-committed-by: Qin Ying, Fan <fanqinying@huawei.com>
2024-05-21 11:04:33 +00:00

20 lines
3.1 KiB
HTML

<a name="bandwidth_0002"></a><a name="bandwidth_0002"></a>
<h1 class="topictitle1">Shared Bandwidth Overview</h1>
<div id="body8662426"><p id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_p2951927133616">A shared bandwidth can be shared by multiple EIPs and controls the data transfer rate on these EIPs in a centralized manner. All ECSs, BMSs, and load balancers that have EIPs bound in the same region can share a bandwidth.</p>
<div class="note" id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_note850110424119"><img src="public_sys-resources/note_3.0-en-us.png"><span class="notetitle"> </span><div class="notebody"><ul id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_ul219312273110"><li id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li10473911131212">A shared bandwidth cannot control how much data can be transferred using a single EIP. Data transfer rate on EIPs cannot be customized.</li></ul>
</div></div>
<p id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_p2509530598">When you host a large number of applications on the cloud, if each EIP uses a bandwidth, a lot of bandwidths are required, increasing O&amp;M workload. If all EIPs share the same bandwidth, VPCs and the region-level bandwidth can be managed in a unified manner, simplifying O&amp;M statistics and network operations cost settlement.</p>
<ul id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_ul924343715419"><li id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li612010141023">Easy to Manage<p id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_p61200149218"><a name="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li612010141023"></a><a name="en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li612010141023"></a>Region-level bandwidth sharing and multiplexing simplify O&amp;M statistics, management, and operations cost settlement.</p>
</li><li id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li113111149174113">Flexible Operations<p id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_p1744461715362"><a name="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li113111149174113"></a><a name="en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li113111149174113"></a>You can add EIPs (except for <strong id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_b257839113214">5_gray</strong> EIPs of dedicated load balancers) to or remove them from a shared bandwidth regardless of the type of instances that they are bound to.</p>
<div class="note" id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_note1432801112472"><img src="public_sys-resources/note_3.0-en-us.png"><span class="notetitle"> </span><div class="notebody"><ul id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_ul772731484618"><li id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_li23367329473">Do not add EIPs of the dedicated load balancer type (<strong id="bandwidth_0002__en-us_topic_0000001865582093_en-us_topic_0118498850_b354915453512">5_gray</strong>) and other types to the same shared bandwidth. Otherwise, the bandwidth limit policy will not take effect.</li></ul>
</div></div>
</li></ul>
</div>
<div>
<div class="familylinks">
<div class="parentlink"><strong>Parent topic:</strong> <a href="bandwidth_0001.html">Shared Bandwidth</a></div>
</div>
</div>