C
HAPTER
4
| Configuring the Switch
Quality of Service
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EB
I
NTERFACE
To configure isolated ports:
1.
Click Configuration, Private VLANs, Port Isolation.
2.
Mark the ports which are to be isolated from each other.
3.
Click Save.
Figure 24: Port Isolation Configuration
Q
UALITY
OF
S
ERVICE
All switches or routers that access the Internet rely on class information to
provide the same forwarding treatment to packets in the same class. Class
information can be assigned by end hosts, or switches or routers along the
path. Priority can then be assigned based on a general policy, or a detailed
examination of the packet. However, note that detailed examination of
packets should take place close to the network edge so that core switches
and routers are not overloaded.
Switches and routers along the path can use class information to prioritize
the resources allocated to different traffic classes. The manner in which an
individual device handles traffic is called per-hop behavior. All devices
along a path should be configured in a consistent manner to construct a
consistent end-to-end Quality of Service (QoS) solution.
This section describes how to specify which data packets have greater
precedence when traffic is buffered in the switch due to congestion. This
switch provides 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, the queuing
mode, and queue weights.
The switch also allows you to configure QoS classification criteria and
service policies. The switch’s resources can be prioritized to meet the
requirements of specific traffic types on a per hop basis. Each packet is
classified upon entry into the network based on Ethernet type, VLAN ID,
TCP/UDP port, DSCP, ToS, or its VLAN priority tag. Based on configured
network policies, different kinds of traffic can be marked for different kinds
of forwarding.
Summary of Contents for 8028L2
Page 1: ...MANAGEMENT GUIDE TigerSwitchTM 10 100 1000 28 Port Gigabit Ethernet Switch SMC8028L2 ...
Page 6: ...ABOUT THIS GUIDE 6 ...
Page 22: ...FIGURES 22 ...
Page 26: ...SECTION Getting Started 26 ...
Page 46: ...CHAPTER 2 Initial Switch Configuration Managing System Files 46 ...
Page 48: ...SECTION Web Configuration 48 ...
Page 144: ...CHAPTER 4 Configuring the Switch Configuring DHCP Relay and Option 82 Information 144 ...
Page 184: ...CHAPTER 6 Performing Basic Diagnostics Running Cable Diagnostics 184 ...
Page 238: ...CHAPTER 12 Port Commands 238 ...
Page 244: ...CHAPTER 13 Link Aggregation Commands 244 ...
Page 262: ...CHAPTER 15 RSTP Commands 262 ...
Page 272: ...CHAPTER 16 IEEE 802 1X Commands 272 ...
Page 282: ...CHAPTER 17 IGMP Commands 282 ...
Page 290: ...CHAPTER 18 LLDP Commands 290 ...
Page 296: ...CHAPTER 19 MAC Commands 296 ...
Page 306: ...CHAPTER 21 PVLAN Commands 306 ...
Page 318: ...CHAPTER 22 QoS Commands 318 ...
Page 352: ...CHAPTER 26 SNMP Commands 352 ...
Page 355: ...CHAPTER 27 HTTPS Commands 355 EXAMPLE HTTPS redirect enable HTTPS ...
Page 356: ...CHAPTER 27 HTTPS Commands 356 ...
Page 362: ...CHAPTER 29 UPnP Commands 362 ...
Page 370: ...CHAPTER 31 Firmware Commands 370 ...
Page 372: ...SECTION Appendices 372 ...
Page 386: ...GLOSSARY 386 ...
Page 391: ...INDEX 391 ...
Page 392: ...149100000079A R01 SMC8028L2 ...