HP 5400ZL User Manual

Page 230

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Quality of Service: Managing Bandwidth More Effectively
QoS Terminology

Term

Use in This Document

DSCP policy

A DSCP codepoint that is configured with an 802.1p priority (0 to 7). Default: No-override.
Using a DSCP policy, you can configure the switch to prioritize IP packets that match a specified
classifier by assigning a new DSCP and 802.1p priority (0-7). For more information on DSCP, refer to
“IPv4 ToS/IPv6 Traffic Class Byte” on page 6-42. For an example of the DSCP bit set in a ToS or Traffic
Class field, see Figure 6-13.

edge switch

In QoS, an edge switch is a switch that receives traffic from the edge of the LAN or from outside the
LAN, and forwards it to devices within the LAN. Typically, an edge switch is used with QoS to identify
packets based on classifiers such as TCP/UDP application type, IP-device (address), Layer 3 protocol
(LAN), VLAN-ID (VID), and source port (although it can also be used to classify packets on the basis of
IP precedence and DSCP bits). Using this packet recognition, the edge switch can be used to set 802.1p
priorities or DSCP policies that downstream devices will honor.

inbound port

Any port on the switch through which traffic enters the switch.

IP options

Optional fields supported in an IPv4 packet header.

IP precedence

The upper three bits in the:

bits

• Type of Service (ToS) byte of an IPv4 packet
• Traffic Class byte of an IPv6 packet

IP precedence

See Type-of-Service (ToS), below.

mode

IPv4

Version 4 of the IP protocol.

IPv6

Version 6 of the IP protocol.

outbound

A packet leaving the switch through any LAN port.

packet

outbound port

Any port on the switch through which traffic leaves the switch.

outbound port

On any port, a buffer that holds outbound traffic until it is transmitted from the switch through the port.

queue

Depending on the switch, by default, there are either four or eight outbound queues for each port on
the switch. Queue 4 or 8 is the highest priority queue; queue 1 is the lowest priority queue. Traffic in a
port’s high priority queue leaves the switch before any traffic in the port’s medium or low priority queues.

QoS policy

Defines a policy configured in one of the following ways:
• Classifier-based: Rate-limiting and/or prioritizing (by 802.1p priority, IP precedence, or DSCP bit

setting) packets in a specified traffic class (defined by the class command).

• Globally-configured: 802.1p priority and/or DSCP codepoint (with global QoS commands)

re-marking

Assigns a new QoS policy to an outbound packet by changing the:
• Class-of-Service (CoS) 802.1p bit setting in Layer 2 VLAN headers
• DSCP bit setting in the Layer 3 IPv4 ToS byte (or IPv6 Traffic Class byte).

tagged port

Identifies a port as belonging to a specific VLAN and enables VLAN-tagged packets to carry an 802.1p

membership

priority when sent from the port in outbound traffic. When a port is an untagged member of a VLAN,
outbound packets belonging to the VLAN do not carry an 802.1p priority setting.

6-8

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