Port Status and Basic Configuration

Configuring Port-Based Priority for Incoming Packets on the 4100gl and 6108 Switches

Configuring Port-Based Priority for Incoming Packets on the 4100gl and 6108 Switches

Feature

Default

Menu

CLI

Web

Assigning a priority level to traffic on the basis

Disabled

n/a

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n/a

of incoming port

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When network congestion occurs, it is important to move traffic on the basis of relative importance. However, without prioritization:

Traffic from less important sources can consume bandwidth and slow down or halt delivery of more important traffic.

Most traffic from all ports is forwarded as normal priority, and competes for bandwidth with all other normal-priority traffic, regardless of its relative importance.

Traffic received in tagged VLAN packets carries a specific 802.1p priority level (0 - 7) that the switch recognizes and uses to assign packet priority at the outbound port. With the default port-based priority, the switch handles traffic received in untagged packets as “Normal” (priority level = 0).

You can assign a priority level to:

Inbound, untagged VLAN packets

Inbound, tagged VLAN packets having a priority level of 0 (zero)

(The switch does not alter the existing priority level of inbound, tagged VLAN packets carrying a priority level of 1-7.)

Thus, for example, high-priority tagged VLAN traffic received on a port retains

its priority in the switch. However, you have the option of iguring the port to assign a priority level to untagged traffic and 0-priority tagged traffic the port receives.

The Role of 802.1Q VLAN Tagging

An 802.1Q-tagged VLAN packet carries the packet’s VLAN assignment and the 802.1p priority setting (0 - 7). (By contrast, an untagged packet does not have a tag and does not carry a priority setting.) Generally, the switch preserves and uses a packet’s priority setting to determine which outbound queue the packet belongs in on the outbound port. If the outbound port is a tagged

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