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Catalyst 6500 Series Switch Software Configuration Guide—Release 8.7
OL-8978-04
Chapter 52 Configuring QoS
Understanding How QoS Works
–
0x6005 (or
dec-diagnostic-protocol
)
–
0x6007 (or
dec-lavc-sca
)
–
0x6008 (or
dec-amber
)
–
0x6009 (or
dec-mumps
)
–
0x8038 (or
dec-lanbridge
)
–
0x8039 (or
dec-dsm
)
–
0x8040 (or
dec-netbios
)
–
0x8041 (or
dec-msdos
)
–
0x8042 (no keyword)
–
0x0BAD (no keyword)
–
0x0baf (or
banyan-vines-echo
)
–
0x0600 (or
xerox-ns-idp
)
•
Optionally with PFC3A, an EtherType parameter from this list:
–
0x8137 (or
ipx-arpa
)
–
0xffff for non-ARPA IPX
The QoS MAC ACLs that do not include an EtherType parameter match the traffic with any value in the
EtherType field, which allows the MAC-level QoS to be applied to any traffic except IP and IPX.
Default ACLs
There are three default ACLs, one each for IP, and with a Layer 3 switching engine, IPX and MAC
traffic. Each ACL has a single ACE that has a configurable marking rule and configurable policers. The
default ACLs have nonconfigurable classification criteria that matches all traffic. QoS compares any
traffic with a supported EtherType field value that does not match a named ACL to the default ACLs.
The unmatched IP traffic matches the default IP ACL. The unmatched IPX traffic matches the default
IPX ACL. The unmatched Ethernet traffic matches the default MAC ACL.
Note
All traffic matches an ACE in an ACL, either an ACE in a named ACL or one of the default ACLs,
because the default ACLs match all traffic.