Port Status and Basic Configuration
Configuring Port-Based Priority for Incoming Packets
Configuring Port-Based Priority for
Incoming Packets
Feature
Default
Menu
CLI
Web
Assigning a priority level to traffic on the basis
of incoming port
Disabled
n/a
page 10-31
n/a
When network congestion occurs, it is important to move traffic on the basis
of relative importance. However, without prioritization:
■
Traffic from less important sources can consume bandwidth and slow
down or halt delivery of more important traffic.
■
Most traffic from all ports is forwarded as normal priority, and competes
for bandwidth with all other normal-priority traffic, regardless of its
relative importance.
Traffic received in tagged VLAN packets carries a specific 802.1p priority level
(0 - 7) that the switch recognizes and uses to assign packet priority at the
outbound port. With the default port-based priority, the switch handles traffic
received in untagged packets as “Normal” (priority level = 0).
You can assign a priority level to:
■
Inbound, untagged VLAN packets
■
Inbound, tagged VLAN packets having a priority level of 0 (zero)
(The switch does not alter the existing priority level of inbound, tagged VLAN
packets carrying a priority level of 1-7.)
Thus, for example, high-priority tagged VLAN traffic received on a port retains
its priority in the switch. However, you have the option of configuring the port
to assign a priority level to untagged traffic and 0-priority tagged traffic the
port receives.
The Role of 802.1Q VLAN Tagging
An 802.1Q-tagged VLAN packet carries the packet’s VLAN assignment and the
802.1p priority setting (0 - 7). (By contrast, an untagged packet does not have
a tag and does not carry a priority setting.) Generally, the switch preserves
and uses a packet’s priority setting to determine which outbound queue the
packet belongs in on the outbound port. If the outbound port is a tagged
member of the VLAN, the packet carries its priority setting to the next,
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Summary of Contents for ProCurve 2610-24
Page 1: ...Management and Configuration Guide 2610 2610 PWR ProCurve Switches R 11 XX www procurve com ...
Page 2: ......
Page 18: ...xvi ...
Page 24: ...Product Documentation xxii ...
Page 54: ...Using the Menu Interface Where To Go From Here 3 16 ...
Page 94: ...Using the Web Browser Interface Status Reporting Features 5 24 ...
Page 132: ...Switch Memory and Configuration Multiple Configuration Files 6 38 ...
Page 148: ...Interface Access and System Information System Information 7 16 ...
Page 192: ...Time Protocols SNTP Messages in the Event Log 9 24 ...
Page 256: ...Power Over Ethernet PoE Operation PoE Event Log Messages 11 18 ...
Page 280: ...Port Trunking Port Status and Configuration 12 24 ...
Page 362: ...File Transfers Copying Diagnostic Data to a Remote Host PC or Unix Workstation A 24 ...
Page 438: ...Troubleshooting Restoring a Flash Image C 48 ...
Page 446: ...MAC Address Management Viewing the MAC Addresses of Connected Devices D 8 ...
Page 450: ...Daylight Savings Time on ProCurve Switches Configuring Daylight Savings Time E 4 ...
Page 462: ...12 Index ...
Page 463: ......