25-8 User Guide for the Avaya P580 and P882 Multiservice Switches, v6.1
Chapter 25
Setting a Physical Port to Ignore Tag Priority
Setting the Priority of a MAC Address
Displaying the Priority of a MAC Address
Setting a Physical Port to Use DiffServ
Setting a Physical Port to Mask DiffServ Bits
Assigning a Priority to a DSCP
Displaying the DiffServ Table
Displaying the QoS Settings for a Physical Port
Setting Up an ACL Rule
Setting Up a Default ACL Rule
Displaying ACL Rules
Default Priority
By default, the switch uses the priority from the 802.1p tag field, if present,
to classify a frame.
If you do not change any of the QoS default settings and the fra m e doe s not
have an 802.1 tag or Cisco ISL tag, the switch assigns the priority of the
physical port to the packet. Each physical port has a default priority of 3.
For information on how to change the priority for a physical port, see
Setting the Priority of a Physical P ort” later in this chapter.
However, the priority of the 802.1 tag and Cisco ISL tag take precedence
over the priority of the physical por t, so the switch uses the priority of t he
physical port only if:
No tags are present in the frame
or
You have set the physical port to ignore priorities in tags.
For information on how to set a por t t o ignore priorities in tags, see
Setting a Physical Port to Ignore Tag Priority” later in this chapter.
* Note: 802.1p packets that are received with a tag priorit y o f 0 on a 50-
series layer 2 (non-routing) module, and that must be routed via
the FORE path on an 80-series supervisor, are queued and
transmitted with a priority of 4. Th is priority change is due to
the conversion from the high-low priority system that 50- se ri es
modules use to the 8-level priority s ystem that 80-series
modules use.