593
Configuring QoS
QoS Treatment for Performance-Monitoring Protocols
When the
cpu traffic qos dscp
global configuration command is configured with table maps, you can configure only
one
map
from
value at a time—DSCP, precedence, or CoS. A new configuration overwrites the existing configuration.
Packets marked by this command can be classified and queued by an output policy map based on the marked DSCP
or precedence value.
When the
cpu traffic qos precedence
global configuration command is configured with table maps, you can
configure only one
map
from
value at a time—DSCP, precedence, or CoS. A new configuration overwrites the
existing configuration. Packets marked by this command can be classified and queued by an output policy map
based on the marked precedence or DSCP value.
You cannot configure a
map
from
value of both DSCP and precedence. A new configuration overwrites the existing
configuration.
When the
cpu traffic qos cos
global configuration command is configured with table maps, you can configure two
map
from
values at a time—CoS and either DSCP or precedence.
If the
cpu traffic qos cos
global configuration command is configured with only a
map
from
value of DSCP or
precedence:
—
The CoS value of IP packets is mapped by using the DSCP (or precedence) value in the packet and the
configured table map. Packets can be classified and queued by an output policy map based on the marked CoS
value.
—
The CoS value of non-IP packets remains unchanged.
If the
cpu traffic qos cos
global configuration command is configured with a
map
from
value of CoS:
—
The CoS value of IP packets is mapped by using the CoS value in the packet and the configured table map.
Packets can be classified and queued by an output policy map based on the marked CoS value.
—
The CoS value of non-IP packets is mapped by using the CoS value in the packet and the configured table map.
Packets can be classified and queued by an output policy map based on the marked CoS value.
If the
cpu traffic qos cos
global configuration command is configured with a
map
from
value of DSCP or
precedence and CoS:
—
The CoS value of IP packets is mapped by using the DSCP or precedence value in the packet and the configured
table map. Packets can be classified and queued by an output policy map based on the marked CoS value.
—
The CoS value of non-IP packets is mapped by using the CoS value in the packet and the configured table map.
Packets can be classified and queued by an output policy map based on the marked CoS value.
The
cpu traffic qos qos-group
global configuration command can be used to configure QoS group marking for
CPU-generated traffic only for a specific QoS group. The
table-map
option is not available.
Congestion Management and Scheduling
Cisco Modular QoS CLI (MQC) provides several related mechanisms to control outgoing traffic flow. They are
implemented in output policy maps to control output traffic queues. The scheduling stage holds packets until the
appropriate time to send them to one of the four traffic queues. Queuing assigns a packet to a particular queue based
on the packet class, and is enhanced by the WTD algorithm for congestion avoidance. You can use different scheduling
mechanisms to provide a guaranteed bandwidth to a particular class of traffic while also serving other traffic in a fair way.
You can limit the maximum bandwidth that can be consumed by a particular class of traffic and ensure that
delay-sensitive traffic in a low-latency queue is sent before traffic in other queues.
The switch supports these scheduling mechanisms:
Traffic shaping
Summary of Contents for IE 4000
Page 12: ...8 Configuration Overview Default Settings After Initial Switch Configuration ...
Page 52: ...48 Configuring Interfaces Monitoring and Maintaining the Interfaces ...
Page 108: ...104 Configuring Switch Clusters Additional References ...
Page 128: ...124 Performing Switch Administration Additional References ...
Page 130: ...126 Configuring PTP ...
Page 140: ...136 Configuring CIP Additional References ...
Page 146: ...142 Configuring SDM Templates Configuration Examples for Configuring SDM Templates ...
Page 192: ...188 Configuring Switch Based Authentication Additional References ...
Page 244: ...240 Configuring IEEE 802 1x Port Based Authentication Additional References ...
Page 298: ...294 Configuring VLANs Additional References ...
Page 336: ...332 Configuring STP Additional References ...
Page 408: ...404 Configuring DHCP Additional References ...
Page 450: ...446 Configuring IGMP Snooping and MVR Additional References ...
Page 490: ...486 Configuring SPAN and RSPAN Additional References ...
Page 502: ...498 Configuring Layer 2 NAT ...
Page 770: ...766 Configuring IPv6 MLD Snooping Related Documents ...
Page 930: ...926 Configuring IP Unicast Routing Related Documents ...
Page 976: ...972 Configuring Cisco IOS IP SLAs Operations Additional References ...
Page 978: ...974 Dying Gasp ...
Page 990: ...986 Configuring Enhanced Object Tracking Monitoring Enhanced Object Tracking ...
Page 994: ...990 Configuring MODBUS TCP Displaying MODBUS TCP Information ...
Page 996: ...992 Ethernet CFM ...
Page 1066: ...1062 Using an SD Card SD Card Alarms ...