Operating Rules For Port-Based Priority - HP ProCurve 2810 Series Management And Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for ProCurve 2810 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Port Status and Basic Configuration
QoS Pass-Through Mode
N o t e
10-28
A tagged packet with an 802.1p priority setting of 0 (zero) coming into the
switch on port A10 and leaving the switch through any other port config­
ured as a tagged VLAN member would leave the switch as a tagged packet
with a priority level of 1.
A tagged packet with an 802.1p priority setting (1 - 7) coming into the
switch on port A10 and leaving the switch through any other port config­
ured as a tagged VLAN member would keep its original priority setting
(regardless of the port-based priority setting on port A10).
For a packet to carry a given 802.1p priority level from end-to-end in a network,
the VLAN for the packet must be configured as tagged on all switch-to-switch
links. Otherwise the tag is removed and the 802.1p priority is lost as the packet
moves from one switch to the next.

Operating Rules for Port-Based Priority

These rules apply to the operation of port-based priority on the switch.
In the switch's default configuration, port-based priority is configured as
"0" (zero) for inbound traffic on all ports.
On a given port, when port-based priority is configured as 0 - 7, an inbound,
untagged packet adopts the specified priority and is sent to the corre­
sponding outbound queue on the outbound port. (See table 10-3, "Mapping
Priority Settings to Device Queues", on page 10-27.) If the outbound port
is a tagged member of the applicable VLAN, then the packet carries a tag
with that priority setting to the next downstream device.
On a given port, when port-based priority is configured as 0 - 7, an inbound,
tagged packet with a priority of 0 (zero) adopts the specified priority and
is sent to the corresponding outbound queue on the outbound port. (See
table 10-3, "Mapping Priority Settings to Device Queues", on page 10-27.)
If the outbound port is a tagged member of the applicable VLAN, then the
packet carries a tag with that priority setting to the next downstream
device.
On a given port, an inbound, tagged packet received on the port with a
preset priority of 1 - 7 in its tag keeps that priority and is assigned an
outbound queue on the basis of that priority (regardless of the port-based
priority configured on the port). (Refer to table 10-3, "Mapping Priority
Settings to Device Queues" on page 10-27.)
If a packet leaves the switch through an outbound port configured as an
untagged member of the packet's VLAN, then the packet leaves the switch
without a VLAN tag and thus without an 802.1p priority setting.

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents