Priority commands (layer 3 and 4), Qos map cos-dscp, Table 116: priority commands (layer 3 and 4) – Microsens MS453490M Management Guide User Manual

Page 822: Priority commands, Layer 3 and 4)

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C

HAPTER

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| Class of Service Commands

Priority Commands (Layer 3 and 4)

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P

RIORITY

C

OMMANDS

(L

AYER

3

AND

4)

This section describes commands used to configure Layer 3 and 4 traffic

priority mapping on the switch.

qos map cos-dscp

This command maps CoS/CFI values in incoming packets to per-hop

behavior and drop precedence values for priority processing. Use the no

form to restore the default settings.

S

YNTAX

qos map cos-dscp phb drop-precedence from cos0 cfi0...cos7 cfi7
no qos map cos-dscp cos0 cfi0...cos7 cfi7

phb - Per-hop behavior, or the priority used for this router hop.

(Range: 0-7)
drop-precedence - Drop precedence used for Random Early

Detection in controlling traffic congestion. (Range: 0 - Green,

3 - Yellow, 1 - Red)
cos - CoS value in ingress packets. (Range: 0-7)
cfi - Canonical Format Indicator. Set to this parameter to “0” to

indicate that the MAC address information carried in the frame is in

canonical format. (Range: 0-1)

Table 116: Priority Commands (Layer 3 and 4)

Command

Function

Mode

qos map cos-dscp

Maps CoS/CFI values in incoming packets to per-hop

behavior and drop precedence values for internal

priority processing

IC

qos map dscp-mutation

Maps DSCP values in incoming packets to per-hop

behavior and drop precedence values for internal

priority processing

IC

qos map phb-queue

Maps internal per-hop behavior values to hardware

queues

IC

qos map trust-mode

Sets QoS mapping to DSCP or CoS

IC

show qos map dscp-

mutation

Shows ingress DSCP to internal DSCP map

PE

show qos map phb-queue

Shows internal per-hop behavior to hardware queue

map

PE

show qos map cos-dscp

Shows ingress CoS to internal DSCP map

PE

show qos map trust-mode

Shows the QoS mapping mode

PE

* The default settings used for mapping priority values to internal DSCP values and back to

the hardware queues are designed to optimize priority services for the majority of network
applications. It should not be necessary to modify any of the default settings unless a
queuing problem occurs with a particular application.

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