
– 231 –
11
C
LASS
OF
S
ERVICE
Class of Service (CoS) allows you to specify which data packets have
greater precedence when traffic is buffered in the switch due to congestion.
This switch supports CoS with four priority queues for each port. Data
packets in a port’s high-priority queue will be transmitted before those in
the lower-priority queues. You can set the default priority for each
interface, and configure the mapping of frame priority tags to the switch’s
priority queues.
This chapter describes the following basic topics:
◆
– Configures each queue, including the default
priority, queue mode, queue weight, and mapping of packets to queues
based on CoS tags.
◆
– Selects the method by which inbound
packets are processed (DSCP or CoS), and sets the per-hop behavior
and drop precedence for internal processing.
L
AYER
2 Q
UEUE
S
ETTINGS
This section describes how to configure the default priority for untagged
frames, set the queue mode, set the weights assigned to each queue, and
map class of service tags to queues.
S
ETTING
THE
D
EFAULT
P
RIORITY
FOR
I
NTERFACES
Use the Traffic > Priority > Default Priority page to specify the default port
priority for each interface on the switch. All untagged packets entering the
switch are tagged with the specified default port priority, and then sorted
into the appropriate priority queue at the output port.
CLI R
EFERENCES
◆
"switchport priority default" on page 866
C
OMMAND
U
SAGE
◆
This switch provides four priority queues for each port. It uses
Weighted Round Robin to prevent head-of-queue blockage, but can be
configured to process each queue in strict order, or use a combination
of strict and weighted queueing.
◆
The default priority applies for an untagged frame received on a port
set to accept all frame types (i.e, receives both untagged and tagged
frames). This priority does not apply to IEEE 802.1Q VLAN tagged
Summary of Contents for ES3510MA-DC
Page 1: ...Management Guide www edge core com 8 Port Layer 2 Fast Ethernet Switch...
Page 2: ......
Page 4: ......
Page 6: ...ABOUT THIS GUIDE 6...
Page 44: ...FIGURES 44...
Page 50: ...TABLES 50...
Page 52: ...SECTION I Getting Started 52...
Page 62: ...CHAPTER 1 Introduction System Defaults 62...
Page 80: ...CHAPTER 2 Initial Switch Configuration Managing System Files 80...
Page 82: ...SECTION II Web Configuration 82...
Page 98: ...CHAPTER 3 Using the Web Interface Navigating the Web Browser Interface 98...
Page 126: ...CHAPTER 4 Basic Management Tasks Resetting the System 126...
Page 164: ...CHAPTER 5 Interface Configuration VLAN Trunking 164 Figure 57 Configuring VLAN Trunking...
Page 202: ...CHAPTER 7 Address Table Settings Configuring MAC Address Mirroring 202...
Page 452: ...CHAPTER 17 IP Services Displaying the DNS Cache 452...
Page 498: ...CHAPTER 19 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups 498...
Page 588: ...CHAPTER 22 SNMP Commands 588...
Page 596: ...CHAPTER 23 Remote Monitoring Commands 596...
Page 650: ...CHAPTER 24 Authentication Commands Management IP Filter 650...
Page 738: ...CHAPTER 27 Interface Commands 738...
Page 760: ...CHAPTER 29 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 760...
Page 782: ...CHAPTER 32 Address Table Commands 782...
Page 810: ...CHAPTER 33 Spanning Tree Commands 810...
Page 862: ...CHAPTER 35 VLAN Commands Configuring Voice VLANs 862...
Page 876: ...CHAPTER 36 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 876...
Page 932: ...CHAPTER 38 Multicast Filtering Commands Multicast VLAN Registration 932...
Page 956: ...CHAPTER 39 LLDP Commands 956...
Page 1020: ...CHAPTER 42 Domain Name Service Commands 1020...
Page 1026: ...CHAPTER 43 DHCP Commands DHCP Client 1026...
Page 1058: ...CHAPTER 44 IP Interface Commands IPv6 Interface 1058...
Page 1060: ...SECTION IV Appendices 1060...
Page 1066: ...APPENDIX A Software Specifications Management Information Bases 1066...
Page 1088: ...COMMAND LIST 1088...
Page 1097: ......