Globally-configured qos, Globally-configured qos -10 – HP 5400ZL User Manual

Page 232

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Quality of Service: Managing Bandwidth More Effectively
QoS Operation

Be sure to carefully plan your QoS strategies in advance, identifying the
network traffic that you can globally configure and the traffic on which you
want to execute customized, classifier-based QoS actions.

Globally-Configured QoS

Globally-Configured QoS Feature

Default

Page

Reference

UDP/TCP Priority

Disabled

page 6-24

IP-Device Priority

Disabled

page 6-33

IP Type-of-Service Priority

Disabled

page 6-41

LAN Protocol Priority

Disabled

page 6-54

VLAN-ID Priority

Disabled

page 6-56

Source-Port Priority

Disabled

page 6-62

DSCP Policy Table

Various

page 6-88

Queue Configuration

4 or 8 Queues*

page 6-95

*Series 3500yl switches use four queues by default.
Series 5400zl switches and the Series 8212zl switch use eight queues by
default.

Globally-configured

QoS operation supports the following types of packet

classification and traffic marking on outbound port and VLAN traffic. For
information on how to configure and use global QoS settings, see “Globally-
Configured QoS” on page 6-19.

Globally configured packet classification criteria include:

IPv4 device: source and destination address

Layer 2 802.1p priority (VLAN header)

Layer 3 protocol (such as ARP, IP, IPX, RIP)

Layer 3 IPv4 Type of Service (ToS) byte: IP precedence or DSCP bits

Layer 3 IPv6 Traffic Class byte: IP precedence or DSCP bits

Layer 4 UDP/TCP application port

Source port on the switch

VLAN ID

Traffic marking options are as follows:

Setting the Layer 2 802.1p priority value in VLAN-tagged and untagged
packet headers

Setting the Layer 3 Differentiated Services Codepoint (DSCP) bits in
the ToS byte of IPv4 packet headers and Traffic Class byte of IPv6
headers.

6-10

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