Quality of Service
ExtremeWare XOS 11.3 Concepts Guide
296
●
Physical/logical groupings
■
Source port
■
VLAN
NOTE
The source port and VLAN QoS apply only to untagged packets, and 802.1p QoS applies only to tagged packets. If
you use 802.1p or DiffServ QoS in conjunction with ACLs, you must configure the 802.1p or DiffServ action within
the ACL itself.
In general, the more specific traffic grouping takes precedence. Those groupings listed at the top of the
table are evaluated first. By default, all traffic groupings are placed in the QoS profile QP1. The
groupings are listed in order of precedence (highest to lowest). The three types of traffic groupings are
described in detail on the following pages.
NOTE
On the BlackDiamond 8800 family of switches and the Summit X450 switch, the precedence of IP ACL or MAC
ACL depends on specifications in the ACL file itself. Refer to
Chapter 13
for more information on ACLs.
ACL-Based Traffic Groupings
ACL-based traffic groupings are based on any combination of the following items:
●
IP source or destination address
●
IP protocol
●
TCP flag
●
TCP/UDP or other Layer 4 protocol
●
TCP/UDP port information
●
IP fragmentation
●
MAC source or destination address
●
Ethertype
ACL-based traffic groupings are defined using access lists. Access lists are discussed in detail in
Chapter 13
. By supplying a named QoS profile on an ACL rule, you can prescribe the bandwidth
management and priority handling for that traffic grouping. This level of packet filtering has no impact
on performance.
Explicit Class of Service (802.1p and DiffServ) Traffic Groupings
This category of traffic groupings describes what is sometimes referred to as
explicit packet marking,
and
refers to information contained within a packet intended to explicitly determine a class of service. That
information includes:
●
Prioritization bits used in IEEE 802.1p packets
●
IP Differentiated Services (DiffServ) code points, formerly known as IP Type of Service (TOS) bits
An advantage of explicit packet marking is that the class of service information can be carried
throughout the network infrastructure, without repeating what can be complex traffic grouping policies
Summary of Contents for ExtremeWare XOS 11.3
Page 20: ...Contents ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 20...
Page 25: ...1 Using ExtremeWare XOS...
Page 26: ......
Page 38: ...ExtremeWare XOS Overview ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 38...
Page 58: ...Accessing the Switch ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 58...
Page 146: ...Configuring Slots and Ports on a Switch ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 146...
Page 218: ...Status Monitoring and Statistics ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 218...
Page 240: ...Virtual LANs ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 240...
Page 248: ...Virtual Routers ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 248...
Page 278: ...Access Lists ACLs ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 278...
Page 288: ...Routing Policies ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 288 entry deny_rest if then deny...
Page 344: ...Security ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 344...
Page 393: ...2 Using Switching and Routing Protocols...
Page 394: ......
Page 454: ...Spanning Tree Protocol ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 454...
Page 484: ...Extreme Standby Router Protocol ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 484...
Page 514: ...IPv4 Unicast Routing ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 514...
Page 530: ...IPv6 Unicast Routing ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 530...
Page 538: ...RIP ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 538...
Page 556: ...OSPF ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 556...
Page 566: ...OSPFv3 ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 566...
Page 589: ...3 Appendixes...
Page 590: ......
Page 640: ...CNA Agent ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 640...
Page 670: ...Glossary ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 670...
Page 698: ...Index ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 698...