E-series priority queuing (ieee 802.1q), E-series priority queuing, Figure 23-16 – Cisco 15327 User Manual

Page 400: Table 23-3

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23-20

Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide, R7.2

Chapter 23 E-Series and G-Series Ethernet Operation

E-Series Priority Queuing (IEEE 802.1Q)

E-Series Priority Queuing (IEEE 802.1Q)

Networks without priority queuing handle all packets on a first-in-first-out (FIFO) basis. Priority
queuing reduces the impact of network congestion by mapping Ethernet traffic to different priority
levels. The E-Series card supports priority queuing. The E-Series card maps the eight priorities specified
in IEEE 802.1Q to two queues, low priority and high priority (

Table 23-3

).

Q-tags carry priority queuing information through the network (

Figure 23-16

).

Figure 23-16

Priority Queuing Process

The ONS node uses a “leaky bucket” algorithm to establish a weighted priority. A weighted priority, as
opposed to a strict priority, gives high-priority packets greater access to bandwidth, but does not totally
preempt low-priority packets. During periods of network congestion, about 70 percent of bandwidth
goes to the high-priority queue and the remaining 30 percent goes to the low-priority queue. A network
that is too congested will drop packets.

Table 23-3

Priority Queuing

User Priority

Queue

Allocated Bandwidth

0,1,2,3

Low

30%

4,5,6,7

High

70%

Data Flow

No priority

ONS node maps a frame
with port-based priority using
a Q-tag.

The receiving ONS node
removes the Q-tag and
forwards the frame.

ONS node uses a Q-tag to
map a frame with priority and
forwards it on.

The receiving ONS node
receives the frame with a
Q-tag and forwards it.

Priority tag

removed

Priority

Priority

Priority

Same

priority

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