224
C
HAPTER
27: Q
O
S C
ONFIGURATION
Configuring Priority
Mapping
Refer to Priority Mapping for introduction to priority mapping.
Setting to Trust the Port
Precedence
In the mode of trusting the port precedence, the switch will replace the 802.1p
priority carried in the packet with the precedence of the receiving port and then
assign the local precedence for the packet according to the precedence of the
receiving port.
Configuration prerequisites
■
The priority trust mode is specified to trusting the port precedence
■
The port that needs port precedence configuration is specified.
■
The precedence value of the specified port is specified.
Configuration procedure
Configuration example
Set to trust the port precedence and specify the precedence of the
GigabitEthernet1/0/1 port to 7.
<S4200G>
system-view
System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z.
[4200G]
interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
[4200G-GigabitEthernet1/0/1]
undo priority-trust
[4200G-GigabitEthernet1/0/1]
priority 7
Setting to Trust the
802.1p priority of the
Packets
Refer to Trusting the 802.1p priority of the Packets for the description on trusting the
802.1p priority of the packets.
You can modify the “COS--
>
other precedence” mapping relationship as required.
Traffic
statistics
Supported
traffic-statistic
Configuring Traffic
Statistics
Set the
priority of
protocol
packets
Supported
protocol-priority
Setting the Precedence of
Protocol Packet
Table 188
The QoS functions supported by S4200G and related commands (Continued)
QoS
Specificati
on
Related command
Link
Table 189
Setting to trust the port precedence
Operation
Command
Description
Enter system view
system-view
-
Enter Ethernet port view
interface
interface-type
interface-number
-
Set to trust the port
precedence
undo priority-trust
Optional
The switch trusts the port precedence by
default.
Set the port precedence
priority
priority-level
Optional
The value of the port precedence is 0 by
default.
Summary of Contents for 4200G 12-Port
Page 10: ...8 CONTENTS...
Page 14: ...4 ABOUT THIS GUIDE...
Page 46: ...32 CHAPTER 5 LOGGING IN THROUGH WEB BASED NETWORK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM...
Page 48: ...34 CHAPTER 6 LOGGING IN THROUGH NMS...
Page 60: ...46 CHAPTER 9 VLAN CONFIGURATION...
Page 64: ...50 CHAPTER 10 MANAGEMENT VLAN CONFIGURATION...
Page 80: ...66 CHAPTER 13 GVRP CONFIGURATION...
Page 98: ...84 CHAPTER 15 LINK AGGREGATION CONFIGURATION...
Page 112: ...98 CHAPTER 18 MAC ADDRESS TABLE MANAGEMENT...
Page 126: ...112 CHAPTER 19 LOGGING IN THROUGH TELNET...
Page 162: ...148 CHAPTER 20 MSTP CONFIGURATION...
Page 274: ...260 CHAPTER 29 IGMP SNOOPING CONFIGURATION...
Page 276: ...262 CHAPTER 30 ROUTING PORT JOIN TO MULTICAST GROUP CONFIGURATION...
Page 298: ...284 CHAPTER 33 SNMP CONFIGURATION...
Page 304: ...290 CHAPTER 34 RMON CONFIGURATION...
Page 338: ...324 CHAPTER 36 SSH TERMINAL SERVICES...
Page 356: ...342 CHAPTER 38 FTP AND TFTP CONFIGURATION...
Page 365: ...Information Center Configuration Example 351 S4200G terminal logging...
Page 366: ...352 CHAPTER 39 INFORMATION CENTER...
Page 378: ...364 CHAPTER 40 BOOTROM AND HOST SOFTWARE LOADING...
Page 384: ...370 CHAPTER 41 Basic System Configuration and Debugging...
Page 388: ...374 CHAPTER 43 NETWORK CONNECTIVITY TEST...
Page 406: ...392 CHAPTER 45 CONFIGURATION OF NEWLY ADDED CLUSTER FUNCTIONS...