Mapping Tables - Cisco WS-C3550-12G Software Configuration Manual

Multilayer switch
Hide thumbs Also See for WS-C3550-12G:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 20
Configuring QoS

Mapping Tables

During QoS processing, the switch represents the priority of all traffic (including non-IP traffic) with an
internal DSCP value:
The CoS-to-DSCP, DSCP-to-CoS, and the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map have default values that might
or might not be appropriate for your network.
The default DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map and the default policed-DSCP map are null maps; they map
an incoming DSCP value to the same DSCP value. The DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map is the only map
you apply to a specific Gigabit-capable Ethernet port or to a group of 10/100 Ethernet ports. All other
maps apply to the entire switch.
For configuration information, see the
78-11194-03
During classification, QoS uses configurable mapping tables to derive the internal DSCP (a 6-bit
value) from received CoS or IP precedence (3-bit) values. These maps include the CoS-to-DSCP
map and the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.
On an ingress interface configured in the DSCP-trusted state, if the DSCP values are different
between the QoS domains, you can apply the configurable DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map to the
interface that is on the boundary between the two QoS domains.
During policing, QoS can assign another DSCP value to an IP or non-IP packet (if the packet is out
of profile and the policer specifies a marked down DSCP value). This configurable map is called the
policed-DSCP map.
Before the traffic reaches the scheduling stage, QoS uses the configurable DSCP-to-CoS map to
derive a CoS value from the internal DSCP value. Through the CoS-to-egress-queue map, the CoS
values select one of the four egress queues for output processing.
"Configuring DSCP Maps" section on page
Catalyst 3550 Multilayer Switch Software Configuration Guide
Understanding QoS
20-39.
20-11

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Catalyst 3550

Table of Contents