
Managing Switches
Configuring Switch Features
■Override “illegal” packet priorities set by upstream devices or applications that use 802.1Q VLAN tagging with 802.1p priority tags.
■Avoid or delay the need to add
Definitions
The following terms are used frequently with policy configuration.
■Differentiated services bits: The upper 6 bits of the Type of Service (ToS) field (the DS field) of an IP packet
■Downstream device: A device linked directly or indirectly to an outbound switch port. The switch sends traffic to downstream devices.
■Inbound port: Any port on a switch through which traffic enters the switch
■Outbound port: Any port on a switch through which traffic leaves the switch
■Outbound port queue: For any port, a buffer that holds outbound traffic until it can leave the switch through that port. There is a “high priority” queue and a “normal priority” queue for each port in the HP Procurve switches supporting this feature. Traffic in a port’s high priority queue leaves the switch before any traffic in the port’s normal priority queue.
■Precedence bits: The upper three bits in the Type of Service (ToS) field of an IP packet
■Upstream device: A device linked directly or indirectly to an inbound switch port. The switch receives traffic from upstream devices.
■802.1p priority: A traffic priority setting carried only in packets in 802.1Q tagged VLANs. This setting can be from 0 to 7.
■802.1Q tagged VLAN: A virtual LAN (VLAN) that complies with the 802.1Q standard and is configured as “tagged”. (For more on VLANS, see the Management and Configuration Guide you received with your HP Procurve switch.)
Basic Operation
Configuring a CoS policy in the switch affects switch internal traffic priorities at the outbound port and, if 802.1Q VLANs are configured in your network, the priority settings in traffic leaving the switch. This enables control over traffic movement within the switch as well as control over the priority settings in packets going to downstream devices and applications that can use those settings.
Policy Option for Controlling Traffic Priorities at the Outbound Port.
Each port in the switch has two outbound traffic queues; “normal” priority and “high” priority.