E table 6-5.) – HP 5400ZL User Manual

Page 242

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Quality of Service: Managing Bandwidth More Effectively
Globally-Configured QoS

Default: In a tagged VLAN environment, the incoming 802.1p priority is
used as the default QoS classifier if no global QoS classifier with a higher
precedence matches (see Table ).

2. Select the global QoS classifier that you want to use. Table 6-5 shows the

types of QoS marking (802.1p priority and/or DSCP codepoint) supported
by each global QoS classifier.

Table 6-5.

QoS Marking Supported by Global QoS Classifiers

Global QoS

Classifiers

Type of QoS Marking Used to

Prioritize Outbound Traffic

802.1p Priority

1

Only

DSCP Policy

2

: DSCP codepoint with

802.1p Priority

UDP/TCP

Supported

Supported

IP Device

Supported

Supported

IP Precedence

Supported

3

Not Supported

IP DiffServ

Supported

Supported

L3 Protocol

Supported

Not Supported

VLAN ID

Supported

Supported

Source Port

Supported

Supported

1

When you configure only the 802.1p priority to mark packets that match a global QoS

classifier, the selected traffic is prioritized and sent to the corresponding outbound port
queue on the switch (see Table 6-2). VLAN-tagged ports are necessary to carry the 802.1p
priority in a packet header to downstream devices.

2

When you configure a DSCP policy to mark packets that match a global QoS classifier, the

selected traffic is also prioritized according to the associated 802.1p priority and sent to the
corresponding outbound port queue on the switch. VLAN-tagged ports carry the 802.1p
priority in a packet header to downstream devices. In addition, you can configure
downstream devices to read the DSCP value in IP packets and implement the service policy
implied by the codepoint.

3

When using a global QoS IP Precedence classifier, the 802.1p priority is automatically

assigned to matching packets based on the IP precedence bit set in the packet header.

3. If you want 802.1p priority settings to be included in outbound packets,

ensure that tagged VLANs are configured on the appropriate downstream
links.

4. Determine the global QoS policy required for each QoS-capable device in

your network and configure the necessary settings.

If you want downstream devices to recognize and use DSCP codepoints
in IP packets sent from the switch, enable ToS Differentiated Service
mode on the devices and configure the appropriate DSCP policies. Note
that certain DSCP policies have a default 802.1p priority automatically
assigned (see Table 6-13).

6-20

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