FibeAir IP-20C/S/E
User Guide
Ceragon Proprietary and Confidential
Page 494 of 597
The following table provides a sample of an interface priority profile. This
profile is also used as the default interface priority profile.
Table 185: Interface Priority Profile Example
Profile ID (1-9)
CoS
Green Priority
(user defined)
Yellow Priority
(read only)
Description
0
1
1
Best Effort
1
2
1
Data Service 4
2
2
1
Data Service 3
3
2
1
Data Service 2
4
2
1
Data Service 1
5
3
1
Real Time 2 (Video with large buffer)
6
3
1
Real Time 1 (Video with small buffer)
7
4
4
Management (Sync, PDUs, etc.)
When the service bundle state is Green (committed state), the service bundle
priorities are as defined in the Green Priority column. When the service
bundle state is Yellow (best effort state), the service bundle priorities are
system-defined priorities shown in the Yellow Priority column.
Note:
CoS 7 is always marked with the highest priority and cannot
be changed or edited, no matter what the service bundle
state is, since it is assumed that only high priority traffic will
be tunneled via CoS 7.
The system supports up to nine interface priority profiles. Profiles 1 to 8 are
defined by the user, while profile 9 is the pre-defined read-only default
interface priority profile.
18.6.3
Configuring Interface Priority Profiles (CLI)
To define an interface priority profile, enter the following command in root
view:
root> ethernet qos port-priority-profile-tbl add profile-id
<profile-id> cos0-priority <cos0-priority> description
<description> cos1-priority <cos1-priority> description
<description> cos2-priority <cos2-priority> description
<description> cos3-priority <cos3-priority> description
<description> cos4-priority <cos4-priority> description
<description> cos5-priority <cos5-priority> description
<description> cos6-priority <cos6-priority> description
<description> cos7-priority <cos7-priority> description
<description>