Overview Of Quality Of Service (Qos); Classification; Processing Of Classified Traffic - Dell PowerConnect B-RX Configuration Manual

Bigiron rx series configuration guide v02.8.00
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Configuring Quality of Service

Overview of Quality of Service (QoS)

Quality of Service (QoS) features are used to prioritize the use of bandwidth in a switch. When QoS
features are enabled, traffic is classified as it arrives at the switch, and processed through on the
basis of configured priorities. Traffic can be dropped, prioritized for guaranteed delivery, or subject
to limited delivery options as configured by a number of different mechanisms.

Classification

Classification is the process of selecting packets on which to perform QoS, reading the QoS
information and assigning them a priority. The classification process assigns a priority to packets
as they enter the switch. These priorities can be determined on the basis of information contained
within the packet or assigned to the packet as it arrives at the switch. Once a packet or traffic flow
is classified, it is mapped to one of four forwarding priority queues.
Packets on the BigIron RX are classified in up to eight traffic classes with values between 0 and 7.
Packets with higher priority classifications are given a precedence for forwarding. These classes
are determined by the following criteria in ascending order:

Processing of classified traffic

Given the variety of different criteria, there are multiple possibilities for traffic classification within a
stream of network traffic. For this reason, the priority of packets must be resolved based on which
criteria takes precedence. Precedence follows the scheme illustrated in
BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide
53-1002253-01
Configured port priority – A priority can be set for all traffic that arrives at a port. This is
implemented through the interface configuration.
VLAN priority – A priority can be set for a specified port-based VLAN in the VLAN configuration.
Packet Source MAC address – A priority can be set for a specified MAC address by assigning a
static MAC entry to a specific priority in the VLAN configuration. Note: This priority affects
packets sourced by this MAC address and not packed destined for this MAC address.
Packet priority – Depending on the Trust level set, a packet can be classified by either the
802.1p priority or DSCP value that it has when it arrives at the switch. If no trust level is set, the
packet will default to a priority set by earlier criteria. By default, the trust level is set to 802.1p.
In addition, you can configure a port to override the DSCP value for every packet that arrives on
it to a user-configured value.
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