
QoS Commands
313
trust
The
trust
policy-map class configuration command configures the trust state. The trust state
selects the value QoS uses as the source of the internal DSCP value from the packet. To return to
the default trust state, use the
no
form of this command.
Syntax
trust
[
cos
|
dscp
|
tcp-udp-port
]
no trust
•
cos
—QoS sets the queue according to CoS to Queue Map.
•
dscp
—QoS derives the internal DSCP value by using the DSCP value from the ingress
packet.
•
tcp-udp-port
—QoS derives the internal DSCP value by using the destination port
value
from the ingress packet, and the tcp-udp-port-to-DSCP-map.
Default Configuration
By default, the port is not trusted. If the
trust
keyword is alone then the default value is
dscp
.
Command Mode
Policy-map Class Configuration mode
User Guidelines
This command is used to distinguish the quality of service (QoS) trust behavior for certain
traffic from others. For example, incoming traffic with certain DSCP values can be trusted. A
class-map can be configured to match and trust the DSCP values in the incoming traffic.
NOTE:
Policy-maps that contain set or trust commands, or have ACL classification, cannot be attached
to an egress interface by using the service-policy interface configuration command.
Trust values set with this command supersede trust values set on specific interfaces with the
qos trust (Interface)
interface configuration command.
If specifying
trust cos
, QoS maps a packet to a queue using the received or default port CoS
value and the CoS-to-queue map.
If specifying
trust dscp
, QoS maps the packet by using the DSCP value from the ingress
packet.
If specifying
tcp-udp-port
, QoS maps the packet to a queue by using the TCP\UDP port
value from the ingress packet and the tcp-udp-port-to-queue map.
Summary of Contents for PowerConnect 6024
Page 24: ...24 Contents ...
Page 86: ...86 ACL Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 128: ...128 Configuration and Image Files w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 182: ...182 IGMP Snooping Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 206: ...206 Line Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 280: ...280 Port Channel Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 284: ...284 Port Monitor Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 316: ...316 QoS Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 368: ...368 w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 410: ...410 SSH Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 443: ...TACACS Commands 443 Global values TimeOut 3 Source IP 172 16 8 1 OOB Source IP 172 16 8 1 ...
Page 444: ...444 TACACS Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 452: ...452 User Interface w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 476: ...476 VRRP Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 486: ...486 Web Server w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...
Page 504: ...504 802 1x Commands w w w d e l l c o m s u p p o r t d e l l c o m ...