Qos Features And Components; Qos Modes - Cisco SF500-24 Administration Manual

Esw2 series advanced switches
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QoS Features and Components

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The QoS feature is used to optimize network performance.
QoS provides the following:
Classification of incoming traffic to traffic classes, based on attributes,
including:
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Device Configuration
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Ingress interface
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Packet content
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Combination of these attributes
QoS includes the following:
Traffic Classification—Classifies each incoming packet as belonging to a
specific traffic flow, based on the packet contents and/or the port. The
classification is done by ACL (Access Control List), and only traffic that
meets the ACL criteria is subject to CoS or QoS classification.
Assignment to Hardware Queues—Assigns incoming packets to
forwarding queues. Packets are sent to a particular queue for handling as a
function of the traffic class to which they belong. See
Queues.
Other Traffic Class-Handling Attribute—Applies QoS mechanisms to
various classes, including bandwidth management.

QoS Modes

The QoS mode that is selected applies to all interfaces in the system.
Basic Mode—Class of Service (CoS).
All traffic of the same class receives the same treatment, which is the single
QoS action of determining the egress queue on the egress port, based on
the indicated QoS value in the incoming frame. This can be the VLAN
Priority Tag (VPT) 802. 1 p value in Layer 2 and the Differentiated Service
Code Point (DSCP) value for IPv4 or Traffic Class (TC) value for IPv6 in
Layer 3. When operating in Basic Mode, the device trusts this external
assigned QoS value. The external assigned QoS value of a packet
determines its traffic class and QoS.
Cisco 500 Series Stackable Managed Switch Administration Guide Release 1.3
Quality of Service
QoS Features and Components
Configuring QoS

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