–
209
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Class of Service
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 eight 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.
Layer 2 Queue Settings
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.
Setting the Default
Priority for Interfaces
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.
Command Usage
◆
This switch provides eight 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 frames. If the incoming
frame is an IEEE 802.1Q VLAN tagged frame, the IEEE 802.1p User Priority bits
will be used.
Summary of Contents for GEL-5261
Page 14: ...14 Contents Glossary 551 Index 559...
Page 26: ...26 Figures...
Page 30: ...30 Section I Getting Started...
Page 42: ...42 Section II Web Configuration IP Services on page 527...
Page 45: ...Chapter 2 Using the Web Interface NavigatingtheWebBrowserInterface 45 Figure 1 Dashboard...
Page 62: ...62 Chapter 2 Using the Web Interface NavigatingtheWebBrowserInterface...
Page 180: ...Chapter 6 Address Table Settings Issuing MAC Address Traps 180...
Page 208: ...Chapter 8 Congestion Control Storm Control 208 Figure 121 Configuring Storm Control...
Page 228: ...228 Chapter 10 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port...
Page 332: ...Chapter 12 Security Measures ARP Inspection 332 Figure 207 Displaying the ARP Inspection Log...
Page 436: ...Chapter 13 Basic Administration Protocols LBD Configuration 436...
Page 488: ...488 Chapter 14 Multicast Filtering Filtering MLD Query Packets on an Interface...
Page 498: ...Chapter 15 IP Tools Address Resolution Protocol 498...
Page 517: ...517 Chapter 16 IP Configuration Setting the Switch s IP Address IP Version 6 interface...
Page 542: ...540 Section III Appendices...
Page 560: ...Glossary 558...
Page 570: ...568 Index E062017 ST R01...