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CH A P T E R 33

Configuring QoS

This chapter describes how to configure quality of service (QoS) by using automatic QoS (auto-QoS)
commands or by using standard QoS commands on the IE 3010 switch. With QoS, you can provide
preferential treatment to certain types of traffic at the expense of others. Without QoS, the switch offers
best-effort service to each packet, regardless of the packet contents or size. It sends the packets without
any assurance of reliability, delay bounds, or throughput.
You can configure QoS on physical ports and on switch virtual interfaces (SVIs). Other than to apply
policy maps, you configure the QoS settings, such as classification, queueing, and scheduling, the same
way on physical ports and SVIs. When configuring QoS on a physical port, you apply a nonhierarchical
policy map to a port. When configuring QoS on an SVI, you apply a nonhierarchical or a hierarchical
policy map.

Note For complete syntax and usage information for the commands used in this chapter, see the command
reference for this release.

This chapter consists of these sections:


• Understanding QoS, page 33-1
• Configuring Auto-QoS, page 33-18
• Displaying Auto-QoS Information, page 33-28
• Configuring Standard QoS, page 33-29
• Displaying Standard QoS Information, page 33-77

Understanding QoS
Typically, networks operate on a best-effort delivery basis, which means that all traffic has equal priority
and an equal chance of being delivered in a timely manner. When congestion occurs, all traffic has an
equal chance of being dropped.
When you configure the QoS feature, you can select specific network traffic, prioritize it according to
its relative importance, and use congestion-management and congestion-avoidance techniques to
provide preferential treatment. Implementing QoS in your network makes network performance more
predictable and bandwidth utilization more effective.
The QoS implementation is based on the Differentiated Services (Diff-Serv) architecture, an emerging
standard from the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). This architecture specifies that each packet
is classified upon entry into the network.

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The classification is carried in the IP packet header, using 6 bits from the deprecated IP type of service
(ToS) field to carry the classification (class) information. Classification can also be carried in the
Layer 2 frame. These special bits in the Layer 2 frame or a Layer 3 packet are described here and shown
in Figure 33-1:
• Prioritization bits in Layer 2 frames:
Layer 2 IEEE 802.1Q frame headers have a 2-byte Tag Control Information field that carries the CoS
value in the three most-significant bits, which are called the User Priority bits. On ports configured
as Layer 2 IEEE 802.1Q trunks, all traffic is in IEEE 802.1Q frames except for traffic in the native
VLAN.
Other frame types cannot carry Layer 2 CoS values.
Layer 2 CoS values range from 0 for low priority to 7 for high priority.
• Prioritization bits in Layer 3 packets:
Layer 3 IP packets can carry either an IP precedence value or a Differentiated Services Code Point
(DSCP) value. QoS supports the use of either value because DSCP values are backward-compatible
with IP precedence values.
IP precedence values range from 0 to 7.
DSCP values range from 0 to 63.

Note Cisco IOS Release 12.2(52)SE and later supports IPv6 port-based trust with the dual IPv4 and IPv6
Switch Database Management (SDM) templates. You must reload the switch with the dual IPv4 and IPv6
templates for switches running IPv6. For more information, see Chapter 8, “Configuring SDM
Templates.”

Figure 33-1 QoS Classification Layers in Frames and Packets

Encapsulated Packet
Layer 2
IP header Data
header

Layer 2 ISL Frame


ISL header Encapsulated frame 1... FCS
(26 bytes) (24.5 KB) (4 bytes)

3 bits used for CoS

Layer 2 802.1Q and 802.1p Frame


Start frame
Preamble DA SA Tag PT Data FCS
delimiter

3 bits used for CoS (user priority)

Layer 3 IPv4 Packet


Version ToS
Len ID Offset TTL Proto FCS IP-SA IP-DA Data
46974

length (1 byte)

IP precedence or DSCP

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All switches and routers that access the Internet rely on the class information to provide the same
forwarding treatment to packets with the same class information and different treatment to packets with
different class information. The class information in the packet can be assigned by end hosts or by
switches or routers along the way, based on a configured policy, detailed examination of the packet, or
both. Detailed examination of the packet is expected to happen closer to the edge of the network so that
the core switches and routers are not overloaded with this task.
Switches and routers along the path can use the class information to limit the amount of resources
allocated per traffic class. The behavior of an individual device when handling traffic in the DiffServ
architecture is called per-hop behavior. If all devices along a path provide a consistent per-hop behavior,
you can construct an end-to-end QoS solution.
Implementing QoS in your network can be a simple or complex task and depends on the QoS features
offered by your internetworking devices, the traffic types and patterns in your network, and the
granularity of control that you need over incoming and outgoing traffic.

Basic QoS Model


To implement QoS, the switch must distinguish packets or flow from one another (classify), assign a
label to indicate the given quality of service as the packets move through the switch, make the packets
comply with the configured resource usage limits (police and mark), and provide different treatment
(queue and schedule) in all situations where resource contention exists. The switch also needs to ensure
that traffic sent from it meets a specific traffic profile (shape).
Figure 33-2 shows the basic QoS model. Actions at the ingress port include classifying traffic, policing,
marking, queueing, and scheduling:
• Classifying a distinct path for a packet by associating it with a QoS label. The switch maps the CoS
or DSCP in the packet to a QoS label to distinguish one kind of traffic from another. The QoS label
that is generated identifies all future QoS actions to be performed on this packet. For more
information, see the “Classification” section on page 33-4.
• Policing determines whether a packet is in or out of profile by comparing the rate of the incoming
traffic to the configured policer. The policer limits the bandwidth consumed by a flow of traffic. The
result is passed to the marker. For more information, see the “Policing and Marking” section on
page 33-8.
• Marking evaluates the policer and configuration information for the action to be taken when a packet
is out of profile and determines what to do with the packet (pass through a packet without
modification, mark down the QoS label in the packet, or drop the packet). For more information, see
the “Policing and Marking” section on page 33-8.
• Queueing evaluates the QoS label and the corresponding DSCP or CoS value to select into which of
the two ingress queues to place a packet. Queueing is enhanced with the weighted tail-drop (WTD)
algorithm, a congestion-avoidance mechanism. If the threshold is exceeded, the packet is dropped.
For more information, see the “Queueing and Scheduling Overview” section on page 33-13.
• Scheduling services the queues based on their configured shaped round robin (SRR) weights. One
of the ingress queues is the priority queue, and SRR services it for its configured share before
servicing the other queue. For more information, see the “SRR Shaping and Sharing” section on
page 33-14.
Actions at the egress port include queueing and scheduling:
• Queueing evaluates the QoS packet label and the corresponding DSCP or CoS value before selecting
which of the four egress queues to use. Because congestion can occur when multiple ingress ports
simultaneously send data to an egress port, WTD differentiates traffic classes and subjects the

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packets to different thresholds based on the QoS label. If the threshold is exceeded, the packet is
dropped. For more information, see the “Queueing and Scheduling Overview” section on
page 33-13.
• Scheduling services the four egress queues based on their configured SRR shared or shaped weights.
One of the queues (queue 1) can be the expedited queue, which is serviced until empty before the
other queues are serviced.

Figure 33-2 Basic QoS Model

Classification
Classification is the process of distinguishing one kind of traffic from another by examining the fields
in the packet. Classification is enabled only if QoS is globally enabled on the switch. By default, QoS is
globally disabled, so no classification occurs.
During classification, the switch performs a lookup and assigns a QoS label to the packet. The QoS label
identifies all QoS actions to be performed on the packet and from which queue the packet is sent.
The QoS label is based on the DSCP or the CoS value in the packet and decides the queueing and
scheduling actions to perform on the packet. The label is mapped according to the trust setting and the
packet type as shown in Figure 33-3 on page 33-6.
You specify which fields in the frame or packet that you want to use to classify incoming traffic. For
non-IP traffic, you have these classification options as shown in Figure 33-3:
• Trust the CoS value in the incoming frame (configure the port to trust CoS). Then use the
configurable CoS-to-DSCP map to generate a DSCP value for the packet. Layer 2 ISL frame headers
carry the CoS value in the 3 least-significant bits of the 1-byte User field. Layer 2 IEEE 802.1Q
frame headers carry the CoS value in the 3 most-significant bits of the Tag Control Information field.
CoS values range from 0 for low priority to 7 for high priority.
• Trust the DSCP or trust IP precedence value in the incoming frame. These configurations are
meaningless for non-IP traffic. If you configure a port with either of these options and non-IP traffic
is received, the switch assigns a CoS value and generates an internal DSCP value from the
CoS-to-DSCP map. The switch uses the internal DSCP value to generate a CoS value representing
the priority of the traffic.

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• Perform the classification based on a configured Layer 2 MAC access control list (ACL), which can
examine the MAC source address, the MAC destination address, and other fields. If no ACL is
configured, the packet is assigned 0 as the DSCP and CoS values, which means best-effort traffic.
Otherwise, the policy-map action specifies a DSCP or CoS value to assign to the incoming frame.
For IP traffic, you have these classification options as shown in Figure 33-3:
• Trust the DSCP value in the incoming packet (configure the port to trust DSCP), and assign the same
DSCP value to the packet. The IETF defines the 6 most-significant bits of the 1-byte ToS field as
the DSCP. The priority represented by a particular DSCP value is configurable. DSCP values range
from 0 to 63.
For ports that are on the boundary between two QoS administrative domains, you can modify the
DSCP to another value by using the configurable DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map.
• Trust the IP precedence value in the incoming packet (configure the port to trust IP precedence), and
generate a DSCP value for the packet by using the configurable IP-precedence-to-DSCP map. The
IP Version 4 specification defines the 3 most-significant bits of the 1-byte ToS field as the IP
precedence. IP precedence values range from 0 for low priority to 7 for high priority.
• Trust the CoS value (if present) in the incoming packet, and generate a DSCP value for the packet by
using the CoS-to-DSCP map. If the CoS value is not present, use the default port CoS value.
• Perform the classification based on a configured IP standard or an extended ACL, which examines
various fields in the IP header. If no ACL is configured, the packet is assigned 0 as the DSCP and
CoS values, which means best-effort traffic. Otherwise, the policy-map action specifies a DSCP or
CoS value to assign to the incoming frame.
For information on the maps described in this section, see the “Mapping Tables” section on page 33-12.
For configuration information on port trust states, see the “Configuring Classification Using Port Trust
States” section on page 33-35.
After classification, the packet is sent to the policing, marking, and the ingress queueing and scheduling
stages.

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Figure 33-3 Classification Flowchart

Start

Trust CoS (IP and non-IP traffic).


Read ingress interface
configuration for classification. Trust DSCP (IP traffic).
IP and
non-IP Trust DSCP or Trust IP
traffic IP precedence precedence
(non-IP traffic). (IP traffic).
Assign DSCP identical
Check if packet came to DSCP in packet.
with CoS label (tag).

Yes No (Optional) Modify the


DSCP by using the
DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation
Use CoS Assign default
map. Use the DSCP
from frame. port CoS.
value to generate
the QoS label.

Generate the DSCP based on


Generate DSCP from
IP precedence in packet. Use
CoS-to-DSCP map.
the IP-precedence-to-DSCP
Use the DSCP value to
map. Use the DSCP value to
generate the QoS label.
generate the QoS label.

Done Done

No Check if packet came


Are there any (more) QoS ACLs with CoS label (tag).
configured for this interface?
Yes No
Yes
Use the CoS value to Assign the default port
Read next ACL. Is there No generate the QoS label. CoS and generate a
a match with a "permit" action? DSCP from the
CoS-to-DSCP map.
Yes

Assign the DSCP or CoS as specified Assign the default Generate the DSCP by using
by ACL action to generate the QoS label. DSCP (0). the CoS-to-DSCP map.
86834

Done Done

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Classification Based on QoS ACLs


You can use IP standard, IP extended, or Layer 2 MAC ACLs to define a group of packets with the same
characteristics (class). In the QoS context, the permit and deny actions in the access control entries
(ACEs) have different meanings than with security ACLs:
• If a match with a permit action is encountered (first-match principle), the specified QoS-related
action is taken.
• If a match with a deny action is encountered, the ACL being processed is skipped, and the next ACL
is processed.
• If no match with a permit action is encountered and all the ACEs have been examined, no QoS
processing occurs on the packet, and the switch offers best-effort service to the packet.
• If multiple ACLs are configured on a port, the lookup stops after the packet matches the first ACL
with a permit action, and QoS processing begins.

Note When creating an access list, remember that, by default, the end of the access list contains an implicit
deny statement for everything if it did not find a match before reaching the end.

After a traffic class has been defined with the ACL, you can attach a policy to it. A policy might contain
multiple classes with actions specified for each one of them. A policy might include commands to
classify the class as a particular aggregate (for example, assign a DSCP) or rate-limit the class. This
policy is then attached to a particular port on which it becomes effective.
You implement IP ACLs to classify IP traffic by using the access-list global configuration command;
you implement Layer 2 MAC ACLs to classify non-IP traffic by using the mac access-list extended
global configuration command. For configuration information, see the “Configuring a QoS Policy”
section on page 33-41.

Classification Based on Class Maps and Policy Maps


A class map is a mechanism that you use to name a specific traffic flow (or class) and to isolate it from
all other traffic. The class map defines the criteria used to match against a specific traffic flow to further
classify it. The criteria can include matching the access group defined by the ACL or matching a specific
list of DSCP or IP precedence values. If you have more than one type of traffic that you want to classify,
you can create another class map and use a different name. After a packet is matched against the
class-map criteria, you further classify it through the use of a policy map.
A policy map specifies which traffic class to act on. Actions can include trusting the CoS, DSCP, or IP
precedence values in the traffic class; setting a specific DSCP or IP precedence value in the traffic class;
or specifying the traffic bandwidth limitations and the action to take when the traffic is out of profile.
Before a policy map can be effective, you must attach it to a port.
You create a class map by using the class-map global configuration command or the class policy-map
configuration command. You should use the class-map command when the map is shared among many
ports. When you enter the class-map command, the switch enters the class-map configuration mode. In
this mode, you define the match criterion for the traffic by using the match class-map configuration
command.
You create and name a policy map by using the policy-map global configuration command. When you
enter this command, the switch enters the policy-map configuration mode. In this mode, you specify the
actions to take on a specific traffic class by using the class, trust, or set policy-map configuration and
policy-map class configuration commands.

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The policy map can contain the police and police aggregate policy-map class configuration commands,
which define the policer, the bandwidth limitations of the traffic, and the action to take if the limits are
exceeded.
To enable the policy map, you attach it to a port by using the service-policy interface configuration
command.
You can apply a nonhierarchical policy map to a physical port or an SVI. However, a hierarchical policy
map can only be applied to an SVI. A hierarchical policy map contains two levels. The first level, the
VLAN level, specifies the actions to be taken against a traffic flow on the SVI. The second level, the
interface level, specifies the actions to be taken against the traffic on the physical ports that belong to the
SVI. The interface-level actions are specified in the interface-level policy map.
For more information, see the “Policing and Marking” section on page 33-8. For configuration
information, see the “Configuring a QoS Policy” section on page 33-41.

Policing and Marking


After a packet is classified and has a DSCP-based or CoS-based QoS label assigned to it, the policing
and marking process can begin as shown in Figure 33-4.
Policing involves creating a policer that specifies the bandwidth limits for the traffic. Packets that exceed
the limits are out of profile or nonconforming. Each policer decides on a packet-by-packet basis whether
the packet is in or out of profile and specifies the actions on the packet. These actions, carried out by the
marker, include passing through the packet without modification, dropping the packet, or modifying
(marking down) the assigned DSCP of the packet and allowing the packet to pass through. The
configurable policed-DSCP map provides the packet with a new DSCP-based QoS label. For information
on the policed-DSCP map, see the “Mapping Tables” section on page 33-12. Marked-down packets use
the same queues as the original QoS label to prevent packets in a flow from getting out of order.

Note All traffic, regardless of whether it is bridged or routed, is subjected to a policer, if one is configured.
As a result, bridged packets might be dropped or might have their DSCP or CoS fields modified when
they are policed and marked.

You can configure policing on a physical port or an SVI. On a physical port, you can configure the trust
state, set a new DSCP or IP precedence value in the packet, or define an individual or aggregate policer.
For more information about configuring policing on physical ports, see the “Policing on Physical Ports”
section on page 33-9. When configuring policy maps on an SVI, you can create a hierarchical policy map
and can define an individual policer only in the secondary interface-level policy map. For more
information, see the “Policing on SVIs” section on page 33-10.
After you configure the policy map and policing actions, attach the policy to an ingress port or SVI by
using the service-policy interface configuration command. For configuration information, see the
“Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps” section on
page 33-47, the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on SVIs by Using Hierarchical Policy
Maps” section on page 33-51, and the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic by Using Aggregate
Policers” section on page 33-57.

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Policing on Physical Ports


In policy maps on physical ports, you can create these types of policers:
• Individual—QoS applies the bandwidth limits specified in the policer separately to each matched
traffic class. You configure this type of policer within a policy map by using the police policy-map
class configuration command.
• Aggregate—QoS applies the bandwidth limits specified in an aggregate policer cumulatively to all
matched traffic flows. You configure this type of policer by specifying the aggregate policer name
within a policy map by using the police aggregate policy-map class configuration command. You
specify the bandwidth limits of the policer by using the mls qos aggregate-policer global
configuration command. In this way, the aggregate policer is shared by multiple classes of traffic
within a policy map.

Note You can only configure individual policers on an SVI.

Policing uses a token-bucket algorithm. As each frame is received by the switch, a token is added to the
bucket. The bucket has a hole in it and leaks at a rate that you specify as the average traffic rate in bits
per second. Each time a token is added to the bucket, the switch verifies that there is enough room in the
bucket. If there is not enough room, the packet is marked as nonconforming, and the specified policer
action is taken (dropped or marked down).
How quickly the bucket fills is a function of the bucket depth (burst-byte), the rate at which the tokens
are removed (rate-b/s), and the duration of the burst above the average rate. The size of the bucket
imposes an upper limit on the burst length and limits the number of frames that can be transmitted
back-to-back. If the burst is short, the bucket does not overflow, and no action is taken against the traffic
flow. However, if a burst is long and at a higher rate, the bucket overflows, and the policing actions are
taken against the frames in that burst.
You configure the bucket depth (the maximum burst that is tolerated before the bucket overflows) by
using the burst-byte option of the police policy-map class configuration command or the mls qos
aggregate-policer global configuration command. You configure how fast (the average rate) that the
tokens are removed from the bucket by using the rate-bps option of the police policy-map class
configuration command or the mls qos aggregate-policer global configuration command.
Figure 33-4 shows the policing and marking process. These types of policy maps are configured:
• A nonhierarchical policy map on a physical port.
• The interface level of a hierarchical policy map attached to an SVI. The physical ports are specified
in this secondary policy map.

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Figure 33-4 Policing and Marking Flowchart on Physical Ports

Start

Get the clasification


result for the packet.

Is a policer configured No
for this packet?

Yes

Check if the packet is in No


profile by querying the policer.

Yes

Pass
through Check out-of-profile action Drop
Drop packet.
configured for this policer.

Mark

Modify DSCP according to the


policed-DSCP map. Generate
a new QoS label.

86835
Done

Policing on SVIs

Note Before configuring a hierarchical policy map with individual policers on an SVI, you must enable
VLAN-based QoS on the physical ports that belong to the SVI. Though a policy map is attached to the
SVI, the individual policers only affect traffic on the physical ports specified in the secondary interface
level of the hierarchical policy map.

A hierarchical policy map has two levels. The first level, the VLAN level, specifies the actions to be
taken against a traffic flow on an SVI. The second level, the interface level, specifies the actions to be
taken against the traffic on the physical ports that belong to the SVI and are specified in the
interface-level policy map.

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When configuring policing on an SVI, you can create and configure a hierarchical policy map with these
two levels:
• VLAN level—Create this primary level by configuring class maps and classes that specify the port
trust state or set a new DSCP or IP precedence value in the packet. The VLAN-level policy map
applies only to the VLAN in an SVI and does not support policers.
• Interface level—Create this secondary level by configuring class maps and classes that specify the
individual policers on physical ports the belong to the SVI. The interface-level policy map only
supports individual policers and does not support aggregate policers. You can configure different
interface-level policy maps for each class defined in the VLAN-level policy map.
See the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on SVIs by Using Hierarchical Policy Maps” section
on page 33-51 for an example of a hierarchical policy map.
Figure 33-5 shows the policing and marking process when hierarchical policy maps on an SVI.

Figure 33-5 Policing and Marking Flowchart on SVIs

Start

Get the VLAN and


interface-level classification
results for the packet.

Is an interface-level policer No
configured for this packet?

Yes

Verify if the packet is in the No


profile by querying the policer.

Yes

Pass
through Verify the out-of-profile action Drop
Drop packet.
configured for this policer.

Mark

Modify DSCP according to the


policed-DSCP map. Generate
a new QoS label.
92355

Done

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Understanding QoS

Mapping Tables
During QoS processing, the switch represents the priority of all traffic (including non-IP traffic) with an
QoS label based on the DSCP or CoS value from the classification stage:
• During classification, QoS uses configurable mapping tables to derive a corresponding DSCP or
CoS value from a received CoS, DSCP, or IP precedence value. These maps include the
CoS-to-DSCP map and the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map. You configure these maps by using the mls
qos map cos-dscp and the mls qos map ip-prec-dscp global configuration commands.
On an ingress port configured in the DSCP-trusted state, if the DSCP values are different between
the QoS domains, you can apply the configurable DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map to the port that is
on the boundary between the two QoS domains. You configure this map by using the mls qos map
dscp-mutation global configuration command.
• During policing, QoS can assign another DSCP value to an IP or a non-IP packet (if the packet is
out of profile and the policer specifies a marked-down value). This configurable map is called the
policed-DSCP map. You configure this map by using the mls qos map policed-dscp global
configuration command.
• Before the traffic reaches the scheduling stage, QoS stores the packet in an ingress and an egress
queue according to the QoS label. The QoS label is based on the DSCP or the CoS value in the packet
and selects the queue through the DSCP input and output queue threshold maps or through the CoS
input and output queue threshold maps. In addition to an ingress or an egress queue, the QOS label
also identifies the WTD threshold value. You configure these maps by using the mls qos srr-queue
{input | output} dscp-map and the mls qos srr-queue {input | output} cos-map global
configuration commands.
The CoS-to-DSCP, DSCP-to-CoS, and the IP-precedence-to-DSCP maps have default values that might
or might not be appropriate for your network.
The default DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map and the default policed-DSCP map are null maps; they map
an incoming DSCP value to the same DSCP value. The DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map is the only map
you apply to a specific port. All other maps apply to the entire switch.
For configuration information, see the “Configuring DSCP Maps” section on page 33-59.
For information about the DSCP and CoS input queue threshold maps, see the “Queueing and
Scheduling on Ingress Queues” section on page 33-14. For information about the DSCP and CoS output
queue threshold maps, see the “Queueing and Scheduling on Egress Queues” section on page 33-16.

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Queueing and Scheduling Overview


The switch has queues at specific points to help prevent congestion as shown in Figure 33-6.

Figure 33-6 Ingress and Egress Queue Location

Policer Marker
Internal Egress
Policer Marker ring queues
Ingress
queues

Traffic
Classify SRR SRR

90563
Policer Marker

Policer Marker

Because the total inbound bandwidth of all ports can exceed the bandwidth of the internal ring, ingress
queues are located after the packet is classified, policed, and marked and before packets are forwarded
into the switch fabric. Because multiple ingress ports can simultaneously send packets to an egress port
and cause congestion, outbound queues are located after the internal ring.

Weighted Tail Drop


Both the ingress and egress queues use an enhanced version of the tail-drop congestion-avoidance
mechanism called weighted tail drop (WTD). WTD is implemented on queues to manage the queue
lengths and to provide drop precedences for different traffic classifications.
As a frame is enqueued to a particular queue, WTD uses the frame’s assigned QoS label to subject it to
different thresholds. If the threshold is exceeded for that QoS label (the space available in the destination
queue is less than the size of the frame), the switch drops the frame.
Each queue has three threshold values. The QOS label is determines which of the three threshold values
is subjected to the frame. Of the three thresholds, two are configurable (explicit) and one is not (implicit).
Figure 33-7 shows an example of WTD operating on a queue whose size is 1000 frames. Three drop
percentages are configured: 40 percent (400 frames), 60 percent (600 frames), and 100 percent (1000
frames). These percentages mean that up to 400 frames can be queued at the 40-percent threshold, up to
600 frames at the 60-percent threshold, and up to 1000 frames at the 100-percent threshold.
In this example, CoS values 6 and 7 have a greater importance than the other CoS values, and they are
assigned to the 100-percent drop threshold (queue-full state). CoS values 4 and 5 are assigned to the
60-percent threshold, and CoS values 0 to 3 are assigned to the 40-percent threshold.
Suppose the queue is already filled with 600 frames, and a new frame arrives. It contains CoS values 4
and 5 and is subjected to the 60-percent threshold. If this frame is added to the queue, the threshold will
be exceeded, so the switch drops it.

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Figure 33-7 WTD and Queue Operation

CoS 6-7
100% 1000

CoS 4-5
60% 600
CoS 0-3
40% 400

86692
0

For more information, see the “Mapping DSCP or CoS Values to an Ingress Queue and Setting WTD
Thresholds” section on page 33-65, the “Allocating Buffer Space to and Setting WTD Thresholds for an
Egress Queue-Set” section on page 33-70, and the “Mapping DSCP or CoS Values to an Egress Queue
and to a Threshold ID” section on page 33-72.

SRR Shaping and Sharing


Both the ingress and egress queues are serviced by SRR, which controls the rate at which packets are
sent. On the ingress queues, SRR sends packets to the internal ring. On the egress queues, SRR sends
packets to the egress port.
You can configure SRR on egress queues for sharing or for shaping. However, for ingress queues, sharing
is the default mode, and it is the only mode supported.
In shaped mode, the egress queues are guaranteed a percentage of the bandwidth, and they are
rate-limited to that amount. Shaped traffic does not use more than the allocated bandwidth even if the
link is idle. Shaping provides a more even flow of traffic over time and reduces the peaks and valleys of
bursty traffic. With shaping, the absolute value of each weight is used to compute the bandwidth
available for the queues.
In shared mode, the queues share the bandwidth among them according to the configured weights. The
bandwidth is guaranteed at this level but not limited to it. For example, if a queue is empty and no longer
requires a share of the link, the remaining queues can expand into the unused bandwidth and share it
among them. With sharing, the ratio of the weights controls the frequency of dequeuing; the absolute
values are meaningless. Shaping and sharing is configured per interface. Each interface can be uniquely
configured.
For more information, see the “Allocating Bandwidth Between the Ingress Queues” section on
page 33-67, the “Configuring SRR Shaped Weights on Egress Queues” section on page 33-73, and the
“Configuring SRR Shared Weights on Egress Queues” section on page 33-74.

Queueing and Scheduling on Ingress Queues


Figure 33-8 shows the queueing and scheduling flowchart for ingress ports.

Figure 33-8 Queueing and Scheduling Flowchart for Ingress Ports

Note SRR services the priority queue for its configured share before servicing the other queue.

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The switch supports two configurable ingress queues, which are serviced by SRR in shared mode only.
Table 33-1 describes the queues.

Table 33-1 Ingress Queue Types

Queue Type1 Function


Normal User traffic that is considered to be normal priority. You can configure three different thresholds to
differentiate among the flows. You can use the mls qos srr-queue input threshold, the mls qos srr-queue
input dscp-map, and the mls qos srr-queue input cos-map global configuration commands.
Expedite High-priority user traffic such as differentiated services (DF) expedited forwarding or voice traffic. You can
configure the bandwidth required for this traffic as a percentage of the total traffic by using the mls qos
srr-queue input priority-queue global configuration command. The expedite queue has guaranteed bandwidth.
1. The switch uses two nonconfigurable queues for traffic that is essential for proper network operation.

You assign each packet that flows through the switch to a queue and to a threshold. Specifically, you map
DSCP or CoS values to an ingress queue and map DSCP or CoS values to a threshold ID. You use the
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue queue-id {dscp1...dscp8 | threshold threshold-id
dscp1...dscp8} or the mls qos srr-queue input cos-map queue queue-id {cos1...cos8 | threshold
threshold-id cos1...cos8} global configuration command. You can display the DSCP input queue
threshold map and the CoS input queue threshold map by using the show mls qos maps privileged EXEC
command.

WTD Thresholds

The queues use WTD to support distinct drop percentages for different traffic classes. Each queue has
three drop thresholds: two configurable (explicit) WTD thresholds and one nonconfigurable (implicit)
threshold preset to the queue-full state. You assign the two explicit WTD threshold percentages for
threshold ID 1 and ID 2 to the ingress queues by using the mls qos srr-queue input threshold queue-id
threshold-percentage1 threshold-percentage2 global configuration command. Each threshold value is a
percentage of the total number of allocated buffers for the queue. The drop threshold for threshold ID 3
is preset to the queue-full state, and you cannot modify it. For more information about how WTD works,
see the “Weighted Tail Drop” section on page 33-13.

Buffer and Bandwidth Allocation

You define the ratio (allocate the amount of space) with which to divide the ingress buffers between the
two queues by using the mls qos srr-queue input buffers percentage1 percentage2 global configuration
command. The buffer allocation together with the bandwidth allocation control how much data can be
buffered and sent before packets are dropped. You allocate bandwidth as a percentage by using the mls
qos srr-queue input bandwidth weight1 weight2 global configuration command. The ratio of the
weights is the ratio of the frequency in which the SRR scheduler sends packets from each queue.

Priority Queueing

You can configure one ingress queue as the priority queue by using the mls qos srr-queue input
priority-queue queue-id bandwidth weight global configuration command. The priority queue should
be used for traffic (such as voice) that requires guaranteed delivery because this queue is guaranteed part
of the bandwidth regardless of the load on the internal ring.

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SRR services the priority queue for its configured weight as specified by the bandwidth keyword in the
mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue queue-id bandwidth weight global configuration command.
Then, SRR shares the remaining bandwidth with both ingress queues and services them as specified by
the weights configured with the mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth weight1 weight2 global
configuration command.
You can combine the commands described in this section to prioritize traffic by placing packets with
particular DSCPs or CoSs into certain queues, by allocating a large queue size or by servicing the queue
more frequently, and by adjusting queue thresholds so that packets with lower priorities are dropped. For
configuration information, see the “Configuring Ingress Queue Characteristics” section on page 33-65.

Queueing and Scheduling on Egress Queues


Figure 33-9 shows the queueing and scheduling flowchart for egress ports.

Note If the expedite queue is enabled, SRR services it until it is empty before servicing the other three queues.

Figure 33-9 Queueing and Scheduling Flowchart for Egress Ports


Each port supports four egress queues, one of which (queue 1) can be the egress expedite queue.These
queues are configured by a queue-set. All traffic leaving an egress port flows through one of these four
queues and is subjected to a threshold based on the QoS label assigned to the packet.
Figure 33-10 shows the egress queue buffer. The buffer space is divided between the common pool and
the reserved pool. The switch uses a buffer allocation scheme to reserve a minimum amount of buffers
for each egress queue, to prevent any queue or port from consuming all the buffers and depriving other
queues, and to control whether to grant buffer space to a requesting queue. The switch detects whether
the target queue has not consumed more buffers than its reserved amount (under-limit), whether it has
consumed all of its maximum buffers (over limit), and whether the common pool is empty (no free
buffers) or not empty (free buffers). If the queue is not over-limit, the switch can allocate buffer space
from the reserved pool or from the common pool (if it is not empty). If there are no free buffers in the
common pool or if the queue is over-limit, the switch drops the frame.

Figure 33-10 Egress Queue Buffer Allocation

Common pool
Port 1 queue 1
Port 1 queue 2
Port 1 queue 3
Port 1 queue 4
Port 2 queue 1
Port 2 queue 2

Reserved pool
86695

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Buffer and Memory Allocation

You guarantee the availability of buffers, set drop thresholds, and configure the maximum memory
allocation for a queue-set by using the mls qos queue-set output qset-id threshold queue-id
drop-threshold1 drop-threshold2 reserved-threshold maximum-threshold global configuration command.
Each threshold value is a percentage of the queue’s allocated memory, which you specify by using the
mls qos queue-set output qset-id buffers allocation1 ... allocation4 global configuration command.
The sum of all the allocated buffers represents the reserved pool, and the remaining buffers are part of
the common pool.
Through buffer allocation, you can ensure that high-priority traffic is buffered. For example, if the buffer
space is 400, you can allocate 70 percent of it to queue 1 and 10 percent to queues 2 through 4. Queue
1 then has 280 buffers allocated to it, and queues 2 through 4 each have 40 buffers allocated to them.
You can guarantee that the allocated buffers are reserved for a specific queue in a queue-set. For
example, if there are 100 buffers for a queue, you can reserve 50 percent (50 buffers). The switch returns
the remaining 50 buffers to the common pool. You also can enable a queue in the full condition to obtain
more buffers than are reserved for it by setting a maximum threshold. The switch can allocate the needed
buffers from the common pool if the common pool is not empty.

WTD Thresholds

You can assign each packet that flows through the switch to a queue and to a threshold. Specifically, you
map DSCP or CoS values to an egress queue and map DSCP or CoS values to a threshold ID. You use
the mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue queue-id {dscp1...dscp8 | threshold threshold-id
dscp1...dscp8} or the mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue queue-id {cos1...cos8 | threshold
threshold-id cos1...cos8} global configuration command. You can display the DSCP output queue
threshold map and the CoS output queue threshold map by using the show mls qos maps privileged
EXEC command.
The queues use WTD to support distinct drop percentages for different traffic classes. Each queue has
three drop thresholds: two configurable (explicit) WTD thresholds and one nonconfigurable (implicit)
threshold preset to the queue-full state. You assign the two WTD threshold percentages for threshold
ID 1 and ID 2. The drop threshold for threshold ID 3 is preset to the queue-full state, and you cannot
modify it. You map a port to queue-set by using the queue-set qset-id interface configuration command.
Modify the queue-set configuration to change the WTD threshold percentages. For more information
about how WTD works, see the “Weighted Tail Drop” section on page 33-13.

Shaped or Shared Mode

SRR services each queue-set in shared or shaped mode. You assign shared or shaped weights to the port
by using the srr-queue bandwidth share weight1 weight2 weight3 weight4 or the srr-queue bandwidth
shape weight1 weight2 weight3 weight4 interface configuration commands. For an explanation of the
differences between shaping and sharing, see the “SRR Shaping and Sharing” section on page 33-14.
The buffer allocation together with the SRR weight ratios control how much data can be buffered and
sent before packets are dropped. The weight ratio is the ratio of the frequency in which the SRR
scheduler sends packets from each queue.
All four queues participate in the SRR unless the expedite queue is enabled, in which case the first
bandwidth weight is ignored and is not used in the ratio calculation. The expedite queue is a priority
queue, and it is serviced until empty before the other queues are serviced. You enable the expedite queue
by using the priority-queue out interface configuration command.

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You can combine the commands described in this section to prioritize traffic by placing packets with
particular DSCPs or CoSs into certain queues, by allocating a large queue size or by servicing the queue
more frequently, and by adjusting queue thresholds so that packets with lower priorities are dropped. For
configuration information, see the “Configuring Egress Queue Characteristics” section on page 33-69.

Note The egress queue default settings are suitable for most situations. You should change them only when
you have a thorough understanding of the egress queues and if these settings do not meet your QoS
solution.

Packet Modification
A packet is classified, policed, and queued to provide QoS. Packet modifications can occur during this
process:
• For IP and non-IP packets, classification involves assigning a QoS label to a packet based on the
DSCP or CoS of the received packet. However, the packet is not modified at this stage; only an
indication of the assigned DSCP or CoS value is carried along. The reason for this is that QoS
classification and forwarding lookups occur in parallel, and it is possible that the packet is forwarded
with its original DSCP to the CPU where it is again processed through software.
• During policing, IP and non-IP packets can have another DSCP assigned to them (if they are out of
profile and the policer specifies a markdown DSCP). Once again, the DSCP in the packet is not
modified, but an indication of the marked-down value is carried along. For IP packets, the packet
modification occurs at a later stage; for non-IP packets the DSCP is converted to CoS and used for
queueing and scheduling decisions.
• Depending on the QoS label assigned to a frame and the mutation chosen, the DSCP and CoS values
of the frame are rewritten. If you do not configure the mutation map and if you configure the port to
trust the DSCP of the incoming frame, the DSCP value in the frame is not changed, but the CoS is
rewritten according to the DSCP-to-CoS map. If you configure the port to trust the CoS of the
incoming frame and it is an IP packet, the CoS value in the frame is not changed, but the DSCP might
be changed according to the CoS-to-DSCP map.
The input mutation causes the DSCP to be rewritten depending on the new value of DSCP chosen.
The set action in a policy map also causes the DSCP to be rewritten.

Configuring Auto-QoS
You can use the auto-QoS feature to simplify the deployment of QoS features. Auto-QoS determines the
network design and enables QoS configurations so that the switch can prioritize different traffic flows.
It uses the ingress and egress queues instead of using the default (disabled) QoS behavior. The switch
offers best-effort service to each packet, regardless of the packet contents or size, and sends it from a
single queue.
When you enable auto-QoS, it automatically classifies traffic based on the traffic type and ingress packet
label. The switch uses the classification results to choose the appropriate egress queue.
Auto-QoS supports IPv4 and IPv6 traffic when you configure the dual IPv4 and IPv6 SDM template with
the sdm prefer dual ipv4-and-ipv6 global configuration command.

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You use auto-QoS commands to identify ports connected to Cisco IP Phones and to devices running the
Cisco SoftPhone application. You also use the commands to identify ports that receive trusted traffic
through an uplink. Auto-QoS then performs these functions:
• Detects the presence or absence of Cisco IP Phones
• Configures QoS classification
• Configures egress queues
These sections contain this configuration information:
• Generated Auto-QoS Configuration, page 33-19
• Effects of Auto-QoS on the Configuration, page 33-24
• Auto-QoS Configuration Guidelines, page 33-24
• Enabling Auto-QoS for VoIP, page 33-25
• Auto-QoS Configuration Example, page 33-27

Generated Auto-QoS Configuration


By default, auto-QoS is disabled on all ports.
When auto-QoS is enabled, it uses the ingress packet label to categorize traffic, to assign packet labels,
and to configure the ingress and egress queues as shown in Table 33-2.

Table 33-2 Traffic Types, Packet Labels, and Queues

VoIP1 Data VoIP Control Routing Protocol STP BPDU Real-Time


Traffic Traffic Traffic Traffic Video Traffic All Other Traffic
DSCP 46 24, 26 48 56 34 –
CoS 5 3 6 7 4 –
CoS-to-Ingress 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 (queue 2) 0, 1 (queue 1)
Queue Map
CoS-to-Egress 5 (queue 1) 3, 6, 7 (queue 2) 4 (queue 3) 2 (queue 3) 0, 1
Queue Map (queue 4)
1. VoIP = voice over IP

Table 33-3 shows the generated auto-QoS configuration for the ingress queues.

Table 33-3 Auto-QoS Configuration for the Ingress Queues

Queue Weight Queue (Buffer)


Ingress Queue Queue Number CoS-to-Queue Map (Bandwidth) Size
SRR shared 1 0, 1 81 percent 67 percent
Priority 2 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 19 percent 33 percent

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Table 33-4 shows the generated auto-QoS configuration for the egress queues.

Table 33-4 Auto-QoS Configuration for the Egress Queues

Queue (Buffer) Size Queue (Buffer)


Queue Weight for Gigabit-Capable Size for 10/100
Egress Queue Queue Number CoS-to-Queue Map (Bandwidth) Ports Ethernet Ports
Priority 1 5 up to100 percent 16 percent 10 percent
SRR shared 2 3, 6, 7 10 percent 6 percent 10 percent
SRR shared 3 2, 4 60 percent 17 percent 26 percent
SRR shared 4 0, 1 20 percent 61 percent 54 percent

When you enable the auto-QoS feature on the first port, these automatic actions occur:
• QoS is globally enabled (mls qos global configuration command), and other global configuration
commands are added.
• When you enter the auto qos voip cisco-phone interface configuration command on a port at the
edge of the network that is connected to a Cisco IP Phone, the switch enables the trusted boundary
feature. The switch uses the Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) to detect the presence or absence of a
Cisco IP Phone. When a Cisco IP Phone is detected, the ingress classification on the port is set to
trust the QoS label received in the packet. The switch also uses policing to determine whether a
packet is in or out of profile and to specify the action on the packet. If the packet does not have a
DSCP value of 24, 26, or 46 or is out of profile, the switch changes the DSCP value to 0. When a
Cisco IP Phone is absent, the ingress classification is set to not trust the QoS label in the packet. The
switch configures ingress and egress queues on the port according to the settings in Table 33-3 and
Table 33-4. The policing is applied to those traffic matching the policy-map classification before the
switch enables the trust boundary feature.
• When you enter the auto qos voip cisco-softphone interface configuration command on a port at
the edge of the network that is connected to a device running the Cisco SoftPhone, the switch uses
policing to determine whether a packet is in or out of profile and to specify the action on the packet.
If the packet does not have a DSCP value of 24, 26, or 46 or is out of profile, the switch changes the
DSCP value to 0. The switch configures ingress and egress queues on the port according to the
settings in Table 33-3 and Table 33-4.
• When you enter the auto qos voip trust interface configuration command on a port connected to the
interior of the network, the switch trusts the CoS value for nonrouted ports or the DSCP value for
routed ports in ingress packets (the assumption is that traffic has already been classified by other
edge devices). The switch configures the ingress and egress queues on the port according to the
settings in Table 33-3 and Table 33-4.
For information about the trusted boundary feature, see the “Configuring a Trusted Boundary to
Ensure Port Security” section on page 33-37.

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When you enable auto-QoS by using the auto qos voip cisco-phone, the auto qos voip cisco-softphone,
or the auto qos voip trust interface configuration command, the switch automatically generates a QoS
configuration based on the traffic type and ingress packet label and applies the commands listed in
Table 33-5 to the port.

Table 33-5 Generated Auto-QoS Configuration

Description Automatically Generated Command


The switch automatically enables standard QoS and configures Switch(config)# mls qos
the CoS-to-DSCP map (maps CoS values in incoming packets Switch(config)# mls qos map cos-dscp 0 8 16 26 32 46
48 56
to a DSCP value).
The switch automatically maps CoS values to an ingress queue Switch(config)# no mls qos srr-queue input cos-map
and to a threshold ID. Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input cos-map
queue 1 threshold 3 0
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input cos-map
queue 1 threshold 2 1
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input cos-map
queue 2 threshold 1 2
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input cos-map
queue 2 threshold 2 4 6 7
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input cos-map
queue 2 threshold 3 3 5
The switch automatically maps CoS values to an egress queue Switch(config)# no mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
and to a threshold ID. Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
queue 1 threshold 3 5
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
queue 2 threshold 3 3 6 7
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
queue 3 threshold 3 2 4
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
queue 4 threshold 2 1
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
queue 4 threshold 3 0
The switch automatically maps DSCP values to an ingress Switch(config)# no mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue and to a threshold ID. Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 1 threshold 2 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 1 threshold 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 1 threshold 3 32
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 1 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 2 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 48
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 2 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 2 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 3 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 3 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

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Table 33-5 Generated Auto-QoS Configuration (continued)

Description Automatically Generated Command


The switch automatically maps DSCP values to an egress Switch(config)# no mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue and to a threshold ID. Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 1 threshold 3 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 3 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 3 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 2 threshold 3 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 3 threshold 3 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 3 threshold 3 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 4 threshold 1 8
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 4 threshold 2 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map
queue 4 threshold 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
The switch automatically sets up the ingress queues, with Switch(config)# no mls qos srr-queue input
queue 2 as the priority queue and queue 1 in shared mode. The priority-queue 1
Switch(config)# no mls qos srr-queue input
switch also configures the bandwidth and buffer size for the priority-queue 2
ingress queues. Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth 90
10
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input threshold 1
8 16
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input threshold 2
34 66
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input buffers 67
33
The switch automatically configures the egress queue buffer Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold
sizes. It configures the bandwidth and the SRR mode (shaped 1 138 138 92 138
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold
or shared) on the egress queues mapped to the port. 2 138 138 92 400
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold
3 36 77 100 318
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold
4 20 50 67 400
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold
1 149 149 100 149
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold
2 118 118 100 235
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold
3 41 68 100 272
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold
4 42 72 100 242
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 1 buffers
10 10 26 54
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 buffers
16 6 17 61
Switch(config-if)# priority-que out
Switch(config-if)# srr-queue bandwidth share 10 10
60 20

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Table 33-5 Generated Auto-QoS Configuration (continued)

Description Automatically Generated Command


If you entered the auto qos voip trust command, the switch Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust cos
automatically sets the ingress classification to trust the CoS Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust dscp
value received in the packet on a nonrouted port by using the
mls qos trust cos command or to trust the DSCP value
received in the packet on a routed port by using the mls qos
trust dscp command.
If you entered the auto qos voip cisco-phone command, the Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust device cisco-phone
switch automatically enables the trusted boundary feature,
which uses the CDP to detect the presence or absence of a
Cisco IP Phone.
If you entered the auto qos voip cisco-softphone command, Switch(config)# mls qos map policed-dscp 24 26 46 to
the switch automatically creates class maps and policy maps. 0
Switch(config)# class-map match-all
AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust
Switch(config-cmap)# match ip dscp ef
Switch(config)# class-map match-all
AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust
Switch(config-cmap)# match ip dscp cs3 af31
Switch(config)# policy-map AutoQoS-Police-SoftPhone
Switch(config-pmap)# class AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp ef
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police 320000 8000
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit
Switch(config-pmap)# class
AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp cs3
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police 32000 8000
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit
After creating the class maps and policy maps, the switch Switch(config-if)# service-policy input
automatically applies the policy map called AutoQoS-Police-SoftPhone
AutoQoS-Police-SoftPhone to an ingress interface on which
auto-QoS with the Cisco SoftPhone feature is enabled.

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Table 33-5 Generated Auto-QoS Configuration (continued)

Description Automatically Generated Command


If you entered the auto qos voip cisco-phone command, the witch(config)# mls qos map policed-dscp 24 26 46 to
switch automatically creates class maps and policy maps. 0
Switch(config)# class-map match-all
AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust
Switch(config-cmap)# match ip dscp ef
Switch(config)# class-map match-all
AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust
Switch(config-cmap)# match ip dscp cs3 af31
Switch(config)# policy-map AutoQoS-Police-CiscoPhone
Switch(config-pmap)# class AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp ef
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police 320000 8000
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit
Switch(config-pmap)# class
AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp cs3
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police 32000 8000
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit

After creating the class maps and policy maps, the switch Switch(config-if)# service-policy input
automatically applies the policy map named AutoQoS-Police-CiscoPhone
AutoQoS-Police-CiscoPhone to an ingress interface on which
auto-QoS with the Cisco Phone feature is enabled.

Effects of Auto-QoS on the Configuration


When auto-QoS is enabled, the auto qos voip interface configuration command and the generated
configuration are added to the running configuration.
The switch applies the auto-QoS-generated commands as if the commands were entered from the CLI.
An existing user configuration can cause the application of the generated commands to fail or to be
overridden by the generated commands. These actions occur without warning. If all the generated
commands are successfully applied, any user-entered configuration that was not overridden remains in
the running configuration. Any user-entered configuration that was overridden can be retrieved by
reloading the switch without saving the current configuration to memory. If the generated commands fail
to be applied, the previous running configuration is restored.

Auto-QoS Configuration Guidelines


Before configuring auto-QoS, you should be aware of this information:
• Auto-QoS configures the switch for VoIP with Cisco IP Phones on nonrouted and routed ports.
Auto-QoS also configures the switch for VoIP with devices running the Cisco SoftPhone
application.
• When a device running Cisco SoftPhone is connected to a nonrouted or routed port, the switch
supports only one Cisco SoftPhone application per port.
• Auto-Qos VoIP uses the priority-queue interface configuration command for an egress interface.
You can also configure a policy-map and trust device on the same interface for Cisco IP phones.

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• To take advantage of the auto-QoS defaults, you should enable auto-QoS before you configure other
QoS commands. If necessary, you can fine-tune the QoS configuration, but we recommend that you
do so only after the auto-QoS configuration is completed. For more information, see the Effects of
Auto-QoS on the Configuration, page 33-24.
• After auto-QoS is enabled, do not modify a policy map or aggregate policer that includes AutoQoS
in its name. If you need to modify the policy map or aggregate policer, make a copy of it, and change
the copied policy map or policer. To use this new policy map instead of the generated one, remove
the generated policy map from the interface, and apply the new policy map to the interface.
• You can enable auto-QoS on static, dynamic-access, voice VLAN access, and trunk ports.
• By default, the CDP is enabled on all ports. For auto-QoS to function properly, do not disable the
CDP.
• When enabling auto-QoS with a Cisco IP Phone on a routed port, you must assign a static IP address
to the IP phone.
• This release supports only Cisco IP SoftPhone Version 1.3(3) or later.
• Connected devices must use Cisco Call Manager Version 4 or later.

Enabling Auto-QoS for VoIP


Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to enable auto-QoS for VoIP within a QoS
domain:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the port that is connected to a Cisco IP Phone, the port that is
connected to a device running the Cisco SoftPhone feature, or the
uplink port that is connected to another trusted switch or router in the
interior of the network, and enter interface configuration mode.
Step 3 auto qos voip {cisco-phone | Enable auto-QoS.
cisco-softphone | trust}
The keywords have these meanings:
• cisco-phone—If the port is connected to a Cisco IP Phone, the
QoS labels of incoming packets are trusted only when the
telephone is detected.
• cisco-softphone—The port is connected to device running the
Cisco SoftPhone feature.
• trust—The uplink port is connected to a trusted switch or router,
and the VoIP traffic classification in the ingress packet is trusted.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show auto qos interface interface-id Verify your entries.
This command displays the auto-QoS command on the interface on
which auto-QoS was enabled. You can use the show running-config
privileged EXEC command to display the auto-QoS configuration
and the user modifications.

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To display the QoS commands that are automatically generated when auto-QoS is enabled or disabled,
enter the debug auto qos privileged EXEC command before enabling auto-QoS. For more information,
see the debug autoqos command in the command reference for this release.
To disable auto-QoS on a port, use the no auto qos voip interface configuration command. Only the
auto-QoS-generated interface configuration commands for this port are removed. If this is the last port
on which auto-QoS is enabled and you enter the no auto qos voip command, auto-QoS is considered
disabled even though the auto-QoS-generated global configuration commands remain (to avoid
disrupting traffic on other ports affected by the global configuration).
You can use the no mls qos global configuration command to disable the auto-QoS-generated global
configuration commands. With QoS disabled, there is no concept of trusted or untrusted ports because
the packets are not modified (the CoS, DSCP, and IP precedence values in the packet are not changed).
Traffic is switched in pass-through mode (packets are switched without any rewrites and classified as
best effort without any policing).
This example shows how to enable auto-QoS and to trust the QoS labels received in incoming packets
when the switch or router connected to a port is a trusted device:
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# auto qos voip trust

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Auto-QoS Configuration Example


This section describes how you could implement auto-QoS in a network, as shown in Figure 33-11. For
optimum QoS performance, enable auto-QoS on all the devices in the network.

Figure 33-11 Auto-QoS Configuration Example Network

Cisco router

To Internet

Trunk Trunk
link link Video server
172.20.10.16

End stations

Identify this interface Identify this interface


as connected to a as connected to a
trusted switch or router trusted switch or router

IP IP

Identify these Identify these


interfaces as interfaces as
IP connected to connected to IP
IP phones IP phones
101234

Cisco IP phones Cisco IP phones

Figure 33-11 shows a network in which the VoIP traffic is prioritized over all other traffic. Auto-QoS is
enabled on the switches in the wiring closets at the edge of the QoS domain.

Note You should not configure any standard QoS commands before entering the auto-QoS commands. You
can fine-tune the QoS configuration, but we recommend that you do so only after the auto-QoS
configuration is completed.

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Displaying Auto-QoS Information

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the switch at the edge of the QoS
domain to prioritize the VoIP traffic over all other traffic:

Command Purpose
Step 1 debug auto qos Enable debugging for auto-QoS. When debugging is enabled, the switch
displays the QoS configuration that is automatically generated when auto-QoS
is enabled.
Step 2 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 3 cdp enable Enable CDP globally. By default, it is enabled.
Step 4 interface interface-id Specify the switch port connected to the Cisco IP Phone, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Step 5 auto qos voip cisco-phone Enable auto-QoS on the port, and specify that the port is connected to a Cisco
IP Phone.
The QoS labels of incoming packets are trusted only when the Cisco IP Phone
is detected.
Step 6 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 7 Repeat Steps 4 to 6 for as many ports as are connected to the Cisco IP Phone.
Step 8 interface interface-id Specify the switch port identified as connected to a trusted switch or router, and
enter interface configuration mode. See Figure 33-11.
Step 9 auto qos voip trust Enable auto-QoS on the port, and specify that the port is connected to a trusted
router or switch.
Step 10 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 11 show auto qos Verify your entries.
This command displays the auto-QoS command on the interface on which
auto-QoS was enabled. You can use the show running-config privileged EXEC
command to display the auto-QoS configuration and the user modifications.
For information about the QoS configuration that might be affected by
auto-QoS, see the “Displaying Auto-QoS Information” section on page 26-12.
Step 12 copy running-config Save the auto qos voip interface configuration commands and the generated
startup-config auto-QoS configuration in the configuration file.

Displaying Auto-QoS Information


To display the initial auto-QoS configuration, use the show auto qos [interface [interface-id]]
privileged EXEC command. To display any user changes to that configuration, use the show
running-config privileged EXEC command. You can compare the show auto qos and the show
running-config command output to identify the user-defined QoS settings.
To display information about the QoS configuration that might be affected by auto-QoS, use one of these
commands:
• show mls qos
• show mls qos maps cos-dscp
• show mls qos interface [interface-id] [buffers | queueing]

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• show mls qos maps [cos-dscp | cos-input-q | cos-output-q | dscp-cos | dscp-input-q |


dscp-mutation | dscp-output-q | ip-prec-dscp | policed-dscp]
• show mls qos input-queue
• show running-config
For more information about these commands, see the command reference for this release.

Configuring Standard QoS


Before configuring standard QoS, you must have a thorough understanding of these items:
• The types of applications used and the traffic patterns on your network.
• Traffic characteristics and needs of your network. Is the traffic bursty? Do you need to reserve
bandwidth for voice and video streams?
• Bandwidth requirements and speed of the network.
• Location of congestion points in the network.
These sections contain this configuration information:
• Default Standard QoS Configuration, page 33-29
• Standard QoS Configuration Guidelines, page 33-32
• Enabling QoS Globally, page 33-34 (required)
• Enabling VLAN-Based QoS on Physical Ports, page 33-34 (optional)
• Configuring Classification Using Port Trust States, page 33-35 (required
• Configuring a QoS Policy, page 33-41 (required)
• Configuring DSCP Maps, page 33-59 (optional, unless you need to use the
DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map or the policed-DSCP map)
• Configuring Ingress Queue Characteristics, page 33-65 (optional)
• Configuring Egress Queue Characteristics, page 33-69 (optional)

Default Standard QoS Configuration


QoS is disabled. There is no concept of trusted or untrusted ports because the packets are not modified
(the CoS, DSCP, and IP precedence values in the packet are not changed). Traffic is switched in
pass-through mode (packets are switched without any rewrites and classified as best effort without any
policing).
When QoS is enabled with the mls qos global configuration command and all other QoS settings are at
their defaults, traffic is classified as best effort (the DSCP and CoS value is set to 0) without any policing.
No policy maps are configured. The default port trust state on all ports is untrusted. The default ingress
and egress queue settings are described in the “Default Ingress Queue Configuration” section on
page 33-30 and the “Default Egress Queue Configuration” section on page 33-30.

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Default Ingress Queue Configuration


Table 33-6 shows the default ingress queue configuration when QoS is enabled.

Table 33-6 Default Ingress Queue Configuration

Feature Queue 1 Queue 2


Buffer allocation 90 percent 10 percent
Bandwidth allocation 1 4 4
2
Priority queue bandwidth 0 10
WTD drop threshold 1 100 percent 100 percent
WTD drop threshold 2 100 percent 100 percent
1. The bandwidth is equally shared between the queues. SRR sends packets in shared mode only.
2. Queue 2 is the priority queue. SRR services the priority queue for its configured share before servicing the other queue.

Table 33-7 shows the default CoS input queue threshold map when QoS is enabled.

Table 33-7 Default CoS Input Queue Threshold Map

CoS Value Queue ID–Threshold ID


0–4 1–1
5 2–1
6, 7 1–1

Table 33-8 shows the default DSCP input queue threshold map when QoS is enabled.

Table 33-8 Default DSCP Input Queue Threshold Map

DSCP Value Queue ID–Threshold ID


0–39 1–1
40–47 2–1
48–63 1–1

Default Egress Queue Configuration


Table 33-9 shows the default egress queue configuration for each queue-set when QoS is enabled. All
ports are mapped to queue-set 1. The port bandwidth limit is set to 100 percent and rate unlimited.

Table 33-9 Default Egress Queue Configuration

Feature Queue 1 Queue 2 Queue 3 Queue 4


Buffer allocation 25 percent 25 percent 25 percent 25 percent
WTD drop threshold 1 100 percent 200 percent 100 percent 100 percent
WTD drop threshold 2 100 percent 200 percent 100 percent 100 percent
Reserved threshold 50 percent 50 percent 50 percent 50 percent

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Table 33-9 Default Egress Queue Configuration (continued)

Feature Queue 1 Queue 2 Queue 3 Queue 4


Maximum threshold 400 percent 400 percent 400 percent 400 percent
SRR shaped weights 25 0 0 0
(absolute) 1
SRR shared weights 2 25 25 25 25
1. A shaped weight of zero means that this queue is operating in shared mode.
2. One quarter of the bandwidth is allocated to each queue.

Table 33-10 shows the default CoS output queue threshold map when QoS is enabled.

Table 33-10 Default CoS Output Queue Threshold Map

CoS Value Queue ID–Threshold ID


0, 1 2–1
2, 3 3–1
4 4–1
5 1–1
6, 7 4–1

Table 33-11 shows the default DSCP output queue threshold map when QoS is enabled.

Table 33-11 Default DSCP Output Queue Threshold Map

DSCP Value Queue ID–Threshold ID


0–15 2–1
16–31 3–1
32–39 4–1
40–47 1–1
48–63 4–1

Default Mapping Table Configuration


The default CoS-to-DSCP map is shown in Table 33-12 on page 33-59.
The default IP-precedence-to-DSCP map is shown in Table 33-13 on page 33-60.
The default DSCP-to-CoS map is shown in Table 33-14 on page 33-62.
The default DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map is a null map, which maps an incoming DSCP value to the
same DSCP value.
The default policed-DSCP map is a null map, which maps an incoming DSCP value to the same DSCP
value (no markdown).

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Standard QoS Configuration Guidelines


Before beginning the QoS configuration, you should be aware of this information in these sections:
• “QoS ACL Guidelines” section on page 33-32
• “Applying QoS on Interfaces” section on page 33-32
• “Policing Guidelines” section on page 33-33
• “General QoS Guidelines” section on page 33-33

QoS ACL Guidelines


These are the guidelines with for configuring QoS with access control lists (ACLs):
• It is not possible to match IP fragments against configured IP extended ACLs to enforce QoS. IP
fragments are sent as best-effort. IP fragments are denoted by fields in the IP header.
• Only one ACL per class map and only one match class-map configuration command per class map
are supported. The ACL can have multiple ACEs, which match fields against the contents of the
packet.
• A trust statement in a policy map requires multiple TCAM entries per ACL line. If an input service
policy map contains a trust statement in an ACL, the access-list might be too large to fit into the
available QoS TCAM and an error can occur when you apply the policy map to a port. Whenever
possible, you should minimize the number of lines in a QoS ACL.

Applying QoS on Interfaces


These are the guidelines with for configuring QoS on physical ports. This section also applies to SVIs
(Layer 3 interfaces):
• You can configure QoS on physical ports and SVIs. When configuring QoS on physical ports, you
create and apply nonhierarchical policy maps. When configuring QoS on SVIs, you can create and
apply nonhierarchical and hierarchical policy maps.
• Incoming traffic is classified, policed, and marked down (if configured) regardless of whether the
traffic is bridged, routed, or sent to the CPU. It is possible for bridged frames to be dropped or to
have their DSCP and CoS values modified.
• Follow these guidelines when configuring policy maps on physical ports or SVIs:
– You cannot apply the same policy map to a physical port and to an SVI.
– If VLAN-based QoS is configured on a physical port, the switch removes all the port-based
policy maps on the port. The traffic on this physical port is now affected by the policy map
attached to the SVI to which the physical port belongs.
– In a hierarchical policy map attached to an SVI, you can only configure an individual policer at
the interface level on a physical port to specify the bandwidth limits for the traffic on the port.
The ingress port must be configured as a trunk or as a static-access port. You cannot configure
policers at the VLAN level of the hierarchical policy map.
– The switch does not support aggregate policers in hierarchical policy maps.

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– After the hierarchical policy map is attached to an SVI, the interface-level policy map cannot
be modified or removed from the hierarchical policy map. A new interface-level policy map also
cannot be added to the hierarchical policy map. If you want these changes to occur, the
hierarchical policy map must first be removed from the SVI. You also cannot add or remove a
class map specified in the hierarchical policy map.

Policing Guidelines
These are the policing guidelines:
• The port ASIC device, which controls more than one physical port, supports 256 policers (255
user-configurable policers plus 1 policer reserved for system internal use). The maximum number
of user-configurable policers supported per port is 63. For example, you could configure 32 policers
on a Gigabit Ethernet port and 8 policers on a Fast Ethernet port, or you could configure 64 policers
on a Gigabit Ethernet port and 5 policers on a Fast Ethernet port. Policers are allocated on demand
by the software and are constrained by the hardware and ASIC boundaries. You cannot reserve
policers per port; there is no guarantee that a port will be assigned to any policer.
• Only one policer is applied to a packet on an ingress port. Only the average rate and committed burst
parameters are configurable.
• You can create an aggregate policer that is shared by multiple traffic classes within the same
nonhierarchical policy map. However, you cannot use the aggregate policer across different policy
maps.
• On a port configured for QoS, all traffic received through the port is classified, policed, and marked
according to the policy map attached to the port. On a trunk port configured for QoS, traffic in all
VLANs received through the port is classified, policed, and marked according to the policy map
attached to the port.
• If you have EtherChannel ports configured on your switch, you must configure QoS classification,
policing, mapping, and queueing on the individual physical ports that comprise the EtherChannel.
You must decide whether the QoS configuration should match on all ports in the EtherChannel.

General QoS Guidelines


These are general QoS guidelines:
• Control traffic (such as spanning-tree bridge protocol data units [BPDUs] and routing update
packets) received by the switch are subject to all ingress QoS processing.
• You are likely to lose data when you change queue settings; therefore, try to make changes when
traffic is at a minimum.

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Enabling QoS Globally


By default, QoS is disabled on the switch.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to enable QoS. This procedure is required.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos Enable QoS globally.
QoS runs with the default settings described in the “Default Standard QoS
Configuration” section on page 33-29, the “Queueing and Scheduling on
Ingress Queues” section on page 33-14, and the “Queueing and Scheduling
on Egress Queues” section on page 33-16.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To disable QoS, use the no mls qos global configuration command.

Enabling VLAN-Based QoS on Physical Ports


By default, VLAN-based QoS is disabled on all physical switch ports. The switch applies QoS, including
class maps and policy maps, only on a physical-port basis. You can enable VLAN-based QoS on a switch
port.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to enable VLAN-based QoS. This procedure is
required on physical ports that are specified in the interface level of a hierarchical policy map on an SVI.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the physical port, and enter interface configuration mode.
Step 3 mls qos vlan-based Enable VLAN-based QoS on the port.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface interface-id Verify if VLAN-based QoS is enabled on the physical port.
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

Use the no mls qos vlan-based interface configuration command to disable VLAN-based QoS on the
physical port.

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Configuring Classification Using Port Trust States


These sections describe how to classify incoming traffic by using port trust states. Depending on your
network configuration, you must perform one or more of these tasks or one or more of the tasks in the
“Configuring a QoS Policy” section on page 33-41:
• Configuring the Trust State on Ports within the QoS Domain, page 33-35
• Configuring the CoS Value for an Interface, page 33-37
• Configuring a Trusted Boundary to Ensure Port Security, page 33-37
• Enabling DSCP Transparency Mode, page 33-39
• Configuring the DSCP Trust State on a Port Bordering Another QoS Domain, page 33-39

Configuring the Trust State on Ports within the QoS Domain


Packets entering a QoS domain are classified at the edge of the QoS domain. When the packets are
classified at the edge, the switch port within the QoS domain can be configured to one of the trusted
states because there is no need to classify the packets at every switch within the QoS domain.
Figure 33-12 shows a sample network topology.

Figure 33-12 Port Trusted States within the QoS Domain

Trusted interface

Trunk

Traffic classification
performed here

P3 P1
101236

IP

Trusted boundary

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the port to trust the classification
of the traffic that it receives:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the port to be trusted, and enter interface configuration
mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 3 mls qos trust [cos | dscp | ip-precedence] Configure the port trust state.
By default, the port is not trusted. If no keyword is specified, the
default is dscp.
The keywords have these meanings:
• cos—Classifies an ingress packet by using the packet CoS value.
For an untagged packet, the port default CoS value is used. The
default port CoS value is 0.
• dscp—Classifies an ingress packet by using the packet DSCP
value. For a non-IP packet, the packet CoS value is used if the
packet is tagged; for an untagged packet, the default port CoS is
used. Internally, the switch maps the CoS value to a DSCP value
by using the CoS-to-DSCP map.
• ip-precedence—Classifies an ingress packet by using the packet
IP-precedence value. For a non-IP packet, the packet CoS value
is used if the packet is tagged; for an untagged packet, the default
port CoS is used. Internally, the switch maps the CoS value to a
DSCP value by using the CoS-to-DSCP map.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface Verify your entries.
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return a port to its untrusted state, use the no mls qos trust interface configuration command.
For information on how to change the default CoS value, see the “Configuring the CoS Value for an
Interface” section on page 33-37. For information on how to configure the CoS-to-DSCP map, see the
“Configuring the CoS-to-DSCP Map” section on page 33-59.

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Configuring the CoS Value for an Interface


QoS assigns the CoS value specified with the mls qos cos interface configuration command to untagged
frames received on trusted and untrusted ports.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to define the default CoS value of a port or to
assign the default CoS to all incoming packets on the port:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the port to be configured, and enter interface configuration mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 3 mls qos cos {default-cos | override} Configure the default CoS value for the port.
• For default-cos, specify a default CoS value to be assigned to a port. If
the packet is untagged, the default CoS value becomes the packet CoS
value. The CoS range is 0 to 7. The default is 0.
• Use the override keyword to override the previously configured trust
state of the incoming packet and to apply the default port CoS value to
the port on all incoming packets. By default, CoS override is disabled.
Use the override keyword when all incoming packets on specified ports
deserve higher or lower priority than packets entering from other ports.
Even if a port was previously set to trust DSCP, CoS, or IP precedence,
this command overrides the previously configured trust state, and all
the incoming CoS values are assigned the default CoS value configured
with this command. If an incoming packet is tagged, the CoS value of
the packet is modified with the default CoS of the port at the ingress
port.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface Verify your entries.
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no mls qos cos {default-cos | override} interface configuration
command.

Configuring a Trusted Boundary to Ensure Port Security


In a typical network, you connect a Cisco IP Phone to a switch port, as shown in Figure 33-12 on
page 33-35, and cascade devices that generate data packets from the back of the telephone. The Cisco IP
Phone guarantees the voice quality through a shared data link by marking the CoS level of the voice
packets as high priority (CoS = 5) and by marking the data packets as low priority (CoS = 0). Traffic sent
from the telephone to the switch is typically marked with a tag that uses the IEEE 802.1Q header. The
header contains the VLAN information and the class of service (CoS) 3-bit field, which is the priority
of the packet.
For most Cisco IP Phone configurations, the traffic sent from the telephone to the switch should be
trusted to ensure that voice traffic is properly prioritized over other types of traffic in the network. By
using the mls qos trust cos interface configuration command, you configure the switch port to which

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the telephone is connected to trust the CoS labels of all traffic received on that port. Use the mls qos
trust dscp interface configuration command to configure a routed port to which the telephone is
connected to trust the DSCP labels of all traffic received on that port.
With the trusted setting, you also can use the trusted boundary feature to prevent misuse of a
high-priority queue if a user bypasses the telephone and connects the PC directly to the switch. Without
trusted boundary, the CoS labels generated by the PC are trusted by the switch (because of the trusted
CoS setting). By contrast, trusted boundary uses CDP to detect the presence of a Cisco IP Phone (such
as the Cisco IP Phone 7910, 7935, 7940, and 7960) on a switch port. If the telephone is not detected, the
trusted boundary feature disables the trusted setting on the switch port and prevents misuse of a
high-priority queue. Note that the trusted boundary feature is not effective if the PC and Cisco IP Phone
are connected to a hub that is connected to the switch.
In some situations, you can prevent a PC connected to the Cisco IP Phone from taking advantage of a
high-priority data queue. You can use the switchport priority extend cos interface configuration
command to configure the telephone through the switch CLI to override the priority of the traffic
received from the PC.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to enable trusted boundary on a port:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 cdp run Enable CDP globally. By default, CDP is enabled.
Step 3 interface interface-id Specify the port connected to the Cisco IP Phone, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 4 cdp enable Enable CDP on the port. By default, CDP is enabled.
Step 5 mls qos trust cos Configure the switch port to trust the CoS value in traffic received from the
Cisco IP Phone.
or
Configure the routed port to trust the DSCP value in traffic received from
mls qos trust dscp
the Cisco IP Phone.
By default, the port is not trusted.
Step 6 mls qos trust device cisco-phone Specify that the Cisco IP Phone is a trusted device.
You cannot enable both trusted boundary and auto-QoS (auto qos voip
interface configuration command) at the same time; they are mutually
exclusive.
Step 7 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 8 show mls qos interface Verify your entries.
Step 9 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To disable the trusted boundary feature, use the no mls qos trust device interface configuration
command.

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Enabling DSCP Transparency Mode


The switch supports the DSCP transparency feature. It affects only the DSCP field of a packet at egress.
By default, DSCP transparency is disabled. The switch modifies the DSCP field in an incoming packet,
and the DSCP field in the outgoing packet is based on the quality of service (QoS) configuration,
including the port trust setting, policing and marking, and the DSCP-to-DSCP mutation map.
If DSCP transparency is enabled by using the no mls qos rewrite ip dscp command, the switch does not
modify the DSCP field in the incoming packet, and the DSCP field in the outgoing packet is the same as
that in the incoming packet.

Note Enabling DSCP transparency does not affect the port trust settings on IEEE 802.1Q tunneling ports.

Regardless of the DSCP transparency configuration, the switch modifies the internal DSCP value of the
packet, which the switch uses to generate a class of service (CoS) value that represents the priority of
the traffic. The switch also uses the internal DSCP value to select an egress queue and threshold.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to enable DSCP transparency on a switch:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos Enable QoS globally.
Step 3 no mls qos rewrite ip dscp Enable DSCP transparency. The switch is configured to not modify the
DSCP field of the IP packet.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface [interface-id] Verify your entries.
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To configure the switch to modify the DSCP value based on the trust setting or on an ACL by disabling
DSCP transparency, use the mls qos rewrite ip dscp global configuration command.
If you disable QoS by using the no mls qos global configuration command, the CoS and DSCP values
are not changed (the default QoS setting).
If you enter the no mls qos rewrite ip dscp global configuration command to enable DSCP transparency
and then enter the mls qos trust [cos | dscp] interface configuration command, DSCP transparency is
still enabled.

Configuring the DSCP Trust State on a Port Bordering Another QoS Domain
If you are administering two separate QoS domains between which you want to implement QoS features
for IP traffic, you can configure the switch ports bordering the domains to a DSCP-trusted state as shown
in Figure 33-13. Then the receiving port accepts the DSCP-trusted value and avoids the classification
stage of QoS. If the two domains use different DSCP values, you can configure the
DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map to translate a set of DSCP values to match the definition in the other
domain.

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Figure 33-13 DSCP-Trusted State on a Port Bordering Another QoS Domain

QoS Domain 1 QoS Domain 2

IP traffic

101235
Set interface to the DSCP-trusted state.
Configure the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map.

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the DSCP-trusted state on a port
and modify the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map. To ensure a consistent mapping strategy across both QoS
domains, you must perform this procedure on the ports in both domains:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos map dscp-mutation Modify the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map.
dscp-mutation-name in-dscp to out-dscp
The default DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map is a null map, which maps
an incoming DSCP value to the same DSCP value.
• For dscp-mutation-name, enter the mutation map name. You can
create more than one map by specifying a new name.
• For in-dscp, enter up to eight DSCP values separated by spaces.
Then enter the to keyword.
• For out-dscp, enter a single DSCP value.
The DSCP range is 0 to 63.
Step 3 interface interface-id Specify the port to be trusted, and enter interface configuration mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 4 mls qos trust dscp Configure the ingress port as a DSCP-trusted port. By default, the port
is not trusted.
Step 5 mls qos dscp-mutation Apply the map to the specified ingress DSCP-trusted port.
dscp-mutation-name
For dscp-mutation-name, specify the mutation map name created in
Step 2.
You can configure multiple DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation maps on an
ingress port.
Step 6 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 7 show mls qos maps dscp-mutation Verify your entries.
Step 8 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

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To return a port to its non-trusted state, use the no mls qos trust interface configuration command. To
return to the default DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map values, use the no mls qos map dscp-mutation
dscp-mutation-name global configuration command.
This example shows how to configure a port to the DSCP-trusted state and to modify the
DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map (named gi0/2-mutation) so that incoming DSCP values 10 to 13 are
mapped to DSCP 30:
Switch(config)# mls qos map dscp-mutation gi0/2-mutation 10 11 12 13 to 30
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/2
Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust dscp
Switch(config-if)# mls qos dscp-mutation gi0/2-mutation
Switch(config-if)# end

Configuring a QoS Policy


Configuring a QoS policy typically requires classifying traffic into classes, configuring policies applied
to those traffic classes, and attaching policies to ports.
For background information, see the “Classification” section on page 33-4 and the “Policing and
Marking” section on page 33-8. For configuration guidelines, see the “Standard QoS Configuration
Guidelines” section on page 33-32.
These sections describe how to classify, police, and mark traffic. Depending on your network
configuration, you must perform one or more of these tasks:
• Classifying Traffic by Using ACLs, page 33-42
• Classifying Traffic by Using Class Maps, page 33-45
• Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps, page 33-47
• Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on SVIs by Using Hierarchical Policy Maps, page 33-51
• Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic by Using Aggregate Policers, page 33-57

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Classifying Traffic by Using ACLs


You can classify IP traffic by using IP standard or IP extended ACLs; you can classify non-IP traffic by
using Layer 2 MAC ACLs.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create an IP standard ACL for IP traffic:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 access-list access-list-number {deny | Create an IP standard ACL, repeating the command as many times as
permit} source [source-wildcard] necessary.
• For access-list-number, enter the access list number. The range is
1 to 99 and 1300 to 1999.
• Use the permit keyword to permit a certain type of traffic if the
conditions are matched. Use the deny keyword to deny a certain
type of traffic if conditions are matched.
• For source, enter the network or host from which the packet is
being sent. You can use the any keyword as an abbreviation for
0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255.
• (Optional) For source-wildcard, enter the wildcard bits in dotted
decimal notation to be applied to the source. Place ones in the bit
positions that you want to ignore.
Note When creating an access list, remember that, by default, the end
of the access list contains an implicit deny statement for
everything if it did not find a match before reaching the end.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show access-lists Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To delete an access list, use the no access-list access-list-number global configuration command.
This example shows how to allow access for only those hosts on the three specified networks. The
wildcard bits apply to the host portions of the network addresses. Any host with a source address that
does not match the access list statements is rejected.
Switch(config)# access-list 1 permit 192.5.255.0 0.0.0.255
Switch(config)# access-list 1 permit 128.88.0.0 0.0.255.255
Switch(config)# access-list 1 permit 36.0.0.0 0.0.0.255
! (Note: all other access implicitly denied)

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create an IP extended ACL for IP traffic:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 access-list access-list-number {deny | Create an IP extended ACL, repeating the command as many times as
permit} protocol source source-wildcard necessary.
destination destination-wildcard
• For access-list-number, enter the access list number. The range is
100 to 199 and 2000 to 2699.
• Use the permit keyword to permit a certain type of traffic if the
conditions are matched. Use the deny keyword to deny a certain
type of traffic if conditions are matched.
• For protocol, enter the name or number of an IP protocol. Use the
question mark (?) to see a list of available protocol keywords.
• For source, enter the network or host from which the packet is
being sent. You specify this by using dotted decimal notation, by
using the any keyword as an abbreviation for source 0.0.0.0
source-wildcard 255.255.255.255, or by using the host keyword
for source 0.0.0.0.
• For source-wildcard, enter the wildcard bits by placing ones in the
bit positions that you want to ignore. You specify the wildcard by
using dotted decimal notation, by using the any keyword as an
abbreviation for source 0.0.0.0 source-wildcard 255.255.255.255,
or by using the host keyword for source 0.0.0.0.
• For destination, enter the network or host to which the packet is
being sent. You have the same options for specifying the
destination and destination-wildcard as those described by source
and source-wildcard.
Note When creating an access list, remember that, by default, the end
of the access list contains an implicit deny statement for
everything if it did not find a match before reaching the end.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show access-lists Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To delete an access list, use the no access-list access-list-number global configuration command.
This example shows how to create an ACL that permits IP traffic from any source to any destination that
has the DSCP value set to 32:
Switch(config)# access-list 100 permit ip any any dscp 32

This example shows how to create an ACL that permits IP traffic from a source host at 10.1.1.1 to a
destination host at 10.1.1.2 with a precedence value of 5:
Switch(config)# access-list 100 permit ip host 10.1.1.1 host 10.1.1.2 precedence 5

This example shows how to create an ACL that permits PIM traffic from any source to a destination
group address of 224.0.0.2 with a DSCP set to 32:
Switch(config)# access-list 102 permit pim any 224.0.0.2 dscp 32

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create a Layer 2 MAC ACL for non-IP traffic:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mac access-list extended name Create a Layer 2 MAC ACL by specifying the name of the list.
After entering this command, the mode changes to extended MAC
ACL configuration.
Step 3 {permit | deny} {host src-MAC-addr mask | Specify the type of traffic to permit or deny if the conditions are
any | host dst-MAC-addr | dst-MAC-addr matched, entering the command as many times as necessary.
mask} [type mask]
• For src-MAC-addr, enter the MAC address of the host from
which the packet is being sent. You specify this by using the
hexadecimal format (H.H.H), by using the any keyword as an
abbreviation for source 0.0.0, source-wildcard ffff.ffff.ffff, or by
using the host keyword for source 0.0.0.
• For mask, enter the wildcard bits by placing ones in the bit
positions that you want to ignore.
• For dst-MAC-addr, enter the MAC address of the host to which
the packet is being sent. You specify this by using the
hexadecimal format (H.H.H), by using the any keyword as an
abbreviation for source 0.0.0, source-wildcard ffff.ffff.ffff, or by
using the host keyword for source 0.0.0.
• (Optional) For type mask, specify the Ethertype number of a
packet with Ethernet II or SNAP encapsulation to identify the
protocol of the packet. For type, the range is from 0 to 65535,
typically specified in hexadecimal. For mask, enter the don’t
care bits applied to the Ethertype before testing for a match.
Note When creating an access list, remember that, by default, the
end of the access list contains an implicit deny statement for
everything if it did not find a match before reaching the end.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show access-lists [access-list-number | Verify your entries.
access-list-name]
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To delete an access list, use the no mac access-list extended access-list-name global configuration
command.
This example shows how to create a Layer 2 MAC ACL with two permit statements. The first statement
allows traffic from the host with MAC address 0001.0000.0001 to the host with MAC
address 0002.0000.0001. The second statement allows only Ethertype XNS-IDP traffic from the host
with MAC address 0001.0000.0002 to the host with MAC address 0002.0000.0002.
Switch(config)# mac access-list extended maclist1
Switch(config-ext-macl)# permit 0001.0000.0001 0.0.0 0002.0000.0001 0.0.0
Switch(config-ext-macl)# permit 0001.0000.0002 0.0.0 0002.0000.0002 0.0.0 xns-idp
! (Note: all other access implicitly denied)

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Classifying Traffic by Using Class Maps


You use the class-map global configuration command to name and to isolate a specific traffic flow (or
class) from all other traffic. The class map defines the criteria to use to match against a specific traffic
flow to further classify it. Match statements can include criteria such as an ACL, IP precedence values,
or DSCP values. The match criterion is defined with one match statement entered within the class-map
configuration mode.

Note You can also create class-maps during policy map creation by using the class policy-map configuration
command. For more information, see the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on Physical Ports
by Using Policy Maps” section on page 33-47 and the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on
SVIs by Using Hierarchical Policy Maps” section on page 33-51.

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create a class map and to define the match
criterion to classify traffic:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 access-list access-list-number {deny | Create an IP standard or extended ACL for IP traffic or a Layer 2 MAC
permit} source [source-wildcard] ACL for non-IP traffic, repeating the command as many times as
necessary.
or
For more information, see the “Classifying Traffic by Using ACLs”
access-list access-list-number {deny |
section on page 33-42.
permit} protocol source [source-wildcard]
destination [destination-wildcard] Note When creating an access list, remember that, by default, the
or end of the access list contains an implicit deny statement for
everything if it did not find a match before reaching the end.
mac access-list extended name
{permit | deny} {host src-MAC-addr mask
| any | host dst-MAC-addr | dst-MAC-addr
mask} [type mask]
Step 3 class-map [match-all | match-any] Create a class map, and enter class-map configuration mode.
class-map-name
By default, no class maps are defined.
• (Optional) Use the match-all keyword to perform a logical-AND
of all matching statements under this class map. All match criteria
in the class map must be matched.
• (Optional) Use the match-any keyword to perform a logical-OR
of all matching statements under this class map. One or more
match criteria must be matched.
• For class-map-name, specify the name of the class map.
If neither the match-all or match-any keyword is specified, the default
is match-all.
Note Because only one match command per class map is supported,
the match-all and match-any keywords function the same.

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Command Purpose
Step 4 match {access-group acl-index-or-name | Define the match criterion to classify traffic.
ip dscp dscp-list | ip precedence
By default, no match criterion is defined.
ip-precedence-list}
Only one match criterion per class map is supported, and only one ACL
per class map is supported.
• For access-group acl-index-or-name, specify the number or name
of the ACL created in Step 2.
• For ip dscp dscp-list, enter a list of up to eight IP DSCP values to
match against incoming packets. Separate each value with a space.
The range is 0 to 63.
• For ip precedence ip-precedence-list, enter a list of up to eight
IP-precedence values to match against incoming packets. Separate
each value with a space. The range is 0 to 7.
Step 5 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 6 show class-map Verify your entries.
Step 7 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To delete an existing policy map, use the no policy-map policy-map-name global configuration
command. To delete an existing class map, use the no class-map [match-all | match-any]
class-map-name global configuration command. To remove a match criterion, use the no match
{access-group acl-index-or-name | ip dscp | ip precedence} class-map configuration command.
This example shows how to configure the class map called class1. The class1 has one match criterion,
which is access list 103. It permits traffic from any host to any destination that matches a DSCP value
of 10.
Switch(config)# access-list 103 permit ip any any dscp 10
Switch(config)# class-map class1
Switch(config-cmap)# match access-group 103
Switch(config-cmap)# end
Switch#

This example shows how to create a class map called class2, which matches incoming traffic with DSCP
values of 10, 11, and 12.
Switch(config)# class-map class2
Switch(config-cmap)# match ip dscp 10 11 12
Switch(config-cmap)# end
Switch#

This example shows how to create a class map called class3, which matches incoming traffic with
IP-precedence values of 5, 6, and 7:
Switch(config)# class-map class3
Switch(config-cmap)# match ip precedence 5 6 7
Switch(config-cmap)# end
Switch#

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Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps
You can configure a nonhierarchical policy map on a physical port that specifies which traffic class to
act on. Actions can include trusting the CoS, DSCP, or IP precedence values in the traffic class; setting
a specific DSCP or IP precedence value in the traffic class; and specifying the traffic bandwidth
limitations for each matched traffic class (policer) and the action to take when the traffic is out of profile
(marking).
A policy map also has these characteristics:
• A policy map can contain multiple class statements, each with different match criteria and policers.
• A separate policy-map class can exist for each type of traffic received through a port.
• A policy-map trust state and a port trust state are mutually exclusive, and whichever is configured
last takes affect.
Follow these guidelines when configuring policy maps on physical ports:
• You can attach only one policy map per ingress port.
• If you configure the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map by using the mls qos map ip-prec-dscp
dscp1...dscp8 global configuration command, the settings only affect packets on ingress interfaces
that are configured to trust the IP precedence value. In a policy map, if you set the packet IP
precedence value to a new value by using the set ip precedence new-precedence policy-map class
configuration command, the egress DSCP value is not affected by the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.
If you want the egress DSCP value to be different than the ingress value, use the set dscp new-dscp
policy-map class configuration command.
• If you enter or have used the set ip dscp command, the switch changes this command to set dscp in
its configuration.
• You can use the set ip precedence or the set precedence policy-map class configuration command
to change the packet IP precedence value. This setting appears as set ip precedence in the switch
configuration.
• You can configure a separate second-level policy map for each class defined for the port. The
second-level policy map specifies the police action to take for each traffic class. For information on
configuring a hierarchical policy map, see Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on SVIs by
Using Hierarchical Policy Maps, page 33-51.
• A policy-map and a port trust state can both run on a physical interface. The policy-map is applied
before the port trust state.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create a nonhierarchical policy map:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 class-map [match-all | match-any] Create a class map, and enter class-map configuration mode.
class-map-name
By default, no class maps are defined.
• (Optional) Use the match-all keyword to perform a logical-AND
of all matching statements under this class map. All match criteria
in the class map must be matched.
• (Optional) Use the match-any keyword to perform a logical-OR of
all matching statements under this class map. One or more match
criteria must be matched.
• For class-map-name, specify the name of the class map.
If neither the match-all or match-any keyword is specified, the default
is match-all.
Note Because only one match command per class map is supported,
the match-all and match-any keywords function the same.
Step 3 policy-map policy-map-name Create a policy map by entering the policy map name, and enter
policy-map configuration mode.
By default, no policy maps are defined.
The default behavior of a policy map is to set the DSCP to 0 if the
packet is an IP packet and to set the CoS to 0 if the packet is tagged. No
policing is performed.
Step 4 class class-map-name Define a traffic classification, and enter policy-map class configuration
mode.
By default, no policy map class-maps are defined.
If a traffic class has already been defined by using the class-map global
configuration command, specify its name for class-map-name in this
command.

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Command Purpose
Step 5 trust [cos | dscp | ip-precedence] Configure the trust state, which QoS uses to generate a CoS-based or
DSCP-based QoS label.
Note This command is mutually exclusive with the set command
within the same policy map. If you enter the trust command,
go to Step 6.

By default, the port is not trusted. If no keyword is specified when the


command is entered, the default is dscp.
The keywords have these meanings:
• cos—QoS derives the DSCP value by using the received or default
port CoS value and the CoS-to-DSCP map.
• dscp—QoS derives the DSCP value by using the DSCP value from
the ingress packet. For non-IP packets that are tagged, QoS derives
the DSCP value by using the received CoS value; for non-IP
packets that are untagged, QoS derives the DSCP value by using
the default port CoS value. In either case, the DSCP value is
derived from the CoS-to-DSCP map.
• ip-precedence—QoS derives the DSCP value by using the IP
precedence value from the ingress packet and the
IP-precedence-to-DSCP map. For non-IP packets that are tagged,
QoS derives the DSCP value by using the received CoS value; for
non-IP packets that are untagged, QoS derives the DSCP value by
using the default port CoS value. In either case, the DSCP value is
derived from the CoS-to-DSCP map.
For more information, see the “Configuring the CoS-to-DSCP Map”
section on page 33-59.
Step 6 set {dscp new-dscp | ip precedence Classify IP traffic by setting a new value in the packet.
new-precedence}
• For dscp new-dscp, enter a new DSCP value to be assigned to the
classified traffic. The range is 0 to 63.
• For ip precedence new-precedence, enter a new IP-precedence
value to be assigned to the classified traffic. The range is 0 to 7.
Step 7 police rate-bps burst-byte [exceed-action Define a policer for the classified traffic.
{drop | policed-dscp-transmit}]
By default, no policer is defined. For information on the number of
policers supported, see the “Standard QoS Configuration Guidelines”
section on page 33-32.
• For rate-bps, specify average traffic rate in bits per second (b/s).
The range is 8000 to 1000000000.
• For burst-byte, specify the normal burst size in bytes. The range is
8000 to 1000000.
• (Optional) Specify the action to take when the rates are exceeded.
Use the exceed-action drop keywords to drop the packet. Use the
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit keywords to mark down the
DSCP value (by using the policed-DSCP map) and to send the
packet. For more information, see the “Configuring the
Policed-DSCP Map” section on page 33-61.

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Command Purpose
Step 8 exit Return to policy map configuration mode.
Step 9 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 10 interface interface-id Specify the port to attach to the policy map, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 11 service-policy input policy-map-name Specify the policy-map name, and apply it to an ingress port.
Only one policy map per ingress port is supported.
Step 12 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 13 show policy-map [policy-map-name [class Verify your entries.
class-map-name]]
Step 14 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To delete an existing policy map, use the no policy-map policy-map-name global configuration
command. To delete an existing class map, use the no class class-map-name policy-map configuration
command. To return to the untrusted state, use the no trust policy-map configuration command. To
remove an assigned DSCP or IP precedence value, use the no set {dscp new-dscp | ip precedence
new-precedence} policy-map configuration command. To remove an existing policer, use the no police
rate-bps burst-byte [exceed-action {drop | policed-dscp-transmit}] policy-map configuration
command. To remove the policy map and port association, use the no service-policy input
policy-map-name interface configuration command.
This example shows how to create a policy map and attach it to an ingress port. In the configuration, the
IP standard ACL permits traffic from network 10.1.0.0. For traffic matching this classification, the DSCP
value in the incoming packet is trusted. If the matched traffic exceeds an average traffic rate of 48000
b/s and a normal burst size of 8000 bytes, its DSCP is marked down (based on the policed-DSCP map)
and sent:
Switch(config)# access-list 1 permit 10.1.0.0 0.0.255.255
Switch(config)# class-map ipclass1
Switch(config-cmap)# match access-group 1
Switch(config-cmap)# exit
Switch(config)# policy-map flow1t
Switch(config-pmap)# class ipclass1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# trust dscp
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police 1000000 8000 exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# service-policy input flow1t

This example shows how to create a Layer 2 MAC ACL with two permit statements and attach it to an
ingress port. The first permit statement allows traffic from the host with MAC address 0001.0000.0001
destined for the host with MAC address 0002.0000.0001. The second permit statement allows only
Ethertype XNS-IDP traffic from the host with MAC address 0001.0000.0002 destined for the host with
MAC address 0002.0000.0002.
Switch(config)# mac access-list extended maclist1
Switch(config-ext-mac)# permit 0001.0000.0001 0.0.0 0002.0000.0001 0.0.0
Switch(config-ext-mac)# permit 0001.0000.0002 0.0.0 0002.0000.0002 0.0.0 xns-idp
Switch(config-ext-mac)# exit
Switch(config)# mac access-list extended maclist2
Switch(config-ext-mac)# permit 0001.0000.0003 0.0.0 0002.0000.0003 0.0.0
Switch(config-ext-mac)# permit 0001.0000.0004 0.0.0 0002.0000.0004 0.0.0 aarp

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Switch(config-ext-mac)# exit
Switch(config)# class-map macclass1
Switch(config-cmap)# match access-group maclist1
Switch(config-cmap)# exit
Switch(config)# policy-map macpolicy1
Switch(config-pmap)# class macclass1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp 63
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# class macclass2 maclist2
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp 45
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust cos
Switch(config-if)# service-policy input macpolicy1

Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on SVIs by Using Hierarchical Policy Maps
You can configure hierarchical policy maps on SVIs, but not on other types of interfaces. Hierarchical
policing combines the VLAN- and interface-level policy maps to create a single policy map.
On an SVI, the VLAN-level policy map specifies which traffic class to act on. Actions can include
trusting the CoS, DSCP, or IP precedence values or setting a specific DSCP or IP precedence value in
the traffic class. Use the interface-level policy map to specify the physical ports that are affected by
individual policers.
Follow these guidelines when configuring hierarchical policy maps:
• Before configuring a hierarchical policy map, you must enable VLAN-based QoS on the physical
ports that are to be specified at the interface level of the policy map.
• You can attach only one policy map per ingress port or SVI.
• A policy map can contain multiple class statements, each with different match criteria and actions.
• A separate policy-map class can exist for each type of traffic received on the SVI.
• A policy-map and a port trust state can both run on a physical interface. The policy-map is applied
before the port trust state.
• If you configure the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map by using the mls qos map ip-prec-dscp
dscp1...dscp8 global configuration command, the settings only affect packets on ingress interfaces
that are configured to trust the IP precedence value. In a policy map, if you set the packet IP
precedence value to a new value by using the set ip precedence new-precedence policy-map class
configuration command, the egress DSCP value is not affected by the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.
If you want the egress DSCP value to be different than the ingress value, use the set dscp new-dscp
policy-map class configuration command.
• If you enter or have used the set ip dscp command, the switch changes this command to set dscp in
its configuration. If you enter the set ip dscp command, this setting appears as set dscp in the switch
configuration.
• You can use the set ip precedence or the set precedence policy-map class configuration command
to change the packet IP precedence value. This setting appears as set ip precedence in the switch
configuration.
• If VLAN-based QoS is enabled, the hierarchical policy map supersedes the previously configured
port-based policy map.

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• The hierarchical policy map is attached to the SVI and affects all traffic belonging to the VLAN.
The actions specified in the VLAN-level policy map affect the traffic belonging to the SVI. The
police action on the port-level policy map affects the ingress traffic on the affected physical
interfaces.
• When configuring a hierarchical policy map on trunk ports, the VLAN ranges must not overlap. If
the ranges overlap, the actions specified in the policy map affect the incoming and outgoing traffic
on the overlapped VLANs.
• Aggregate policers are not supported in hierarchical policy maps.
• When VLAN-based QoS is enabled, the switch supports VLAN-based features, such as the VLAN
map.
• You can configure a hierarchical policy map only on the primary VLAN of a private VLAN.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create a hierarchical policy map:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 class-map [match-all | match-any] Create a VLAN-level class map, and enter class-map configuration
class-map-name mode. For information about creating a class map, see the “Classifying
Traffic by Using Class Maps” section on page 33-45.
By default, no class maps are defined.
• (Optional) Use the match-all keyword to perform a logical-AND
of all matching statements under this class map. All match criteria
in the class map must be matched.
• (Optional) Use the match-any keyword to perform a logical-OR of
all matching statements under this class map. One or more match
criteria must be matched.
• For class-map-name, specify the name of the class map.
If neither the match-all or match-any keyword is specified, the default
is match-all.
Note Because only one match command per class map is supported,
the match-all and match-any keywords function the same.
Step 3 match {access-group acl-index-or-name | Define the match criterion to classify traffic.
ip dscp dscp-list | ip precedence
By default, no match criterion is defined.
ip-precedence-list}
Only one match criterion per class map is supported, and only one ACL
per class map is supported.
• For access-group acl-index-or-name, specify the number or name
of the ACL.
• For ip dscp dscp-list, enter a list of up to eight IP DSCP values to
match against incoming packets. Separate each value with a space.
The range is 0 to 63.
• For ip precedence ip-precedence-list, enter a list of up to eight
IP-precedence values to match against incoming packets. Separate
each value with a space. The range is 0 to 7.
Step 4 exit Return to class-map configuration mode.

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Command Purpose
Step 5 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 6 class-map [match-all | match-any] Create an interface-level class map, and enter class-map configuration
class-map-name mode.
By default, no class maps are defined.
• (Optional) Use the match-all keyword to perform a logical-AND
of all matching statements under this class map. All match criteria
in the class map must be matched.
• (Optional) Use the match-any keyword to perform a logical-OR of
all matching statements under this class map. One or more match
criteria must be matched.
• For class-map-name, specify the name of the class map.
If neither the match-all or match-any keyword is specified, the default
is match-all.
Note Because only one match command per class map is supported,
the match-all and match-any keywords function the same.
Step 7 match input-interface interface-id-list Specify the physical ports on which the interface-level class map acts.
You can specify up to six ports as follows:
• A single port (counts as one entry)
• A list of ports separated by a space (each port counts as an entry)
• A range of ports separated by a hyphen (counts as two entries)
This command can only be used in the child-level policy map and must
be the only match condition in the child-level policy map.
Step 8 exit Return to class-map configuration mode.
Step 9 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 10 policy-map policy-map-name Create an interface-level policy map by entering the policy-map name,
and enter policy-map configuration mode.
By default, no policy maps are defined, and no policing is performed.
Step 11 class-map class-map-name Define an interface-level traffic classification, and enter policy-map
configuration mode.
By default, no policy-map class-maps are defined.
If a traffic class has already been defined by using the class-map global
configuration command, specify its name for class-map-name in this
command.

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Command Purpose
Step 12 police rate-bps burst-byte [exceed-action Define an individual policer for the classified traffic.
{drop | policed-dscp-transmit}]
By default, no policer is defined. For information on the number of
policers supported, see the “Standard QoS Configuration Guidelines”
section on page 33-32.
• For rate-bps, specify average traffic rate in bits per second (b/s).
The range is 8000 to 1000000000.
• For burst-byte, specify the normal burst size in bytes. The range is
8000 to 1000000.
• (Optional) Specify the action to take when the rates are exceeded.
Use the exceed-action drop keywords to drop the packet. Use the
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit keywords to mark down the
DSCP value (by using the policed-DSCP map) and to send the
packet. For more information, see the “Configuring the
Policed-DSCP Map” section on page 33-61.
Step 13 exit Return to policy-map configuration mode.
Step 14 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 15 policy-map policy-map-name Create a VLAN-level policy map by entering the policy-map name, and
enter policy-map configuration mode.
By default, no policy maps are defined.
The default behavior of a policy map is to set the DSCP to 0 if the
packet is an IP packet and to set the CoS to 0 if the packet is tagged. No
policing is performed.
Step 16 class class-map-name Define a VLAN-level traffic classification, and enter policy-map class
configuration mode.
By default, no policy-map class-maps are defined.
If a traffic class has already been defined by using the class-map global
configuration command, specify its name for class-map-name in this
command.

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Command Purpose
Step 17 trust [cos | dscp | ip-precedence] Configure the trust state, which QoS uses to generate a CoS-based or
DSCP-based QoS label.
Note This command is mutually exclusive with the set command
within the same policy map. If you enter the trust command,
omit Step 18.

By default, the port is not trusted. If no keyword is specified when the


command is entered, the default is dscp.
The keywords have these meanings:
• cos—QoS derives the DSCP value by using the received or default
port CoS value and the CoS-to-DSCP map.
• dscp—QoS derives the DSCP value by using the DSCP value from
the ingress packet. For non-IP packets that are tagged, QoS derives
the DSCP value by using the received CoS value; for non-IP
packets that are untagged, QoS derives the DSCP value by using
the default port CoS value. In either case, the DSCP value is
derived from the CoS-to-DSCP map.
• ip-precedence—QoS derives the DSCP value by using the IP
precedence value from the ingress packet and the
IP-precedence-to-DSCP map. For non-IP packets that are tagged,
QoS derives the DSCP value by using the received CoS value; for
non-IP packets that are untagged, QoS derives the DSCP value by
using the default port CoS value. In either case, the DSCP value is
derived from the CoS-to-DSCP map.
For more information, see the “Configuring the CoS-to-DSCP Map”
section on page 33-59.
Step 18 set {dscp new-dscp | ip precedence Classify IP traffic by setting a new value in the packet.
new-precedence}
• For dscp new-dscp, enter a new DSCP value to be assigned to the
classified traffic. The range is 0 to 63.
• For ip precedence new-precedence, enter a new IP-precedence
value to be assigned to the classified traffic. The range is 0 to 7.
Step 19 service-policy policy-map-name Specify the interface-level policy-map name (from Step 10) and
associate it with the VLAN-level policy map.
If the VLAN-level policy map specifies more than one class, beginning
in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SED, each class can have a different
service-policy policy-map-name command.
Step 20 exit Return to policy-map configuration mode.
Step 21 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 22 interface interface-id Specify the SVI to which to attach the hierarchical policy map, and
enter interface configuration mode.

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Command Purpose
Step 23 service-policy input policy-map-name Specify the VLAN-level policy-map name, and apply it to the SVI.
Repeat the previous step and this command to apply the policy map to
other SVIs.
If the hierarchical VLAN-level policy map has more than one
interface-level policy map, all class maps must be configured to the
same VLAN-level policy map specified in the service-policy
policy-map-name command.
Step 24 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 25 show policy-map [policy-map-name [class Verify your entries.
class-map-name]]
or
show mls qos vlan-based
Step 26 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To delete an existing policy map, use the no policy-map policy-map-name global configuration
command. To delete an existing class map, use the no class class-map-name policy-map configuration
command.
To return to the untrusted state in a policy map, use the no trust policy-map configuration command. To
remove an assigned DSCP or IP precedence value, use the no set {dscp new-dscp | ip precedence
new-precedence} policy-map configuration command.
To remove an existing policer in an interface-level policy map, use the no police rate-bps burst-byte
[exceed-action {drop | policed-dscp-transmit}] policy-map configuration command. To remove the
hierarchical policy map and port associations, use the no service-policy input policy-map-name
interface configuration command.
This example shows how to create a hierarchical policy map:
Switch> enable
Switch# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Switch(config)# access-list 101 permit ip any any
Switch(config)# class-map cm-1
Switch(config-cmap)# match access 101
Switch(config-cmap)# exit
Switch(config)# exit
Switch#

This example shows how to attach the new map to an SVI:


Switch# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Switch(config)# class-map cm-interface-1
Switch(config-cmap)# match input g3/0/1 - g3/0/2
Switch(config-cmap)# exit
Switch(config)# policy-map port-plcmap
Switch(config-pmap)# class-map cm-interface-1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police 900000 9000 exc policed-dscp-transmit
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config)# policy-map vlan-plcmap
Switch(config-pmap)# class-map cm-1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp 7
Switch(config-pmap-c)# service-policy port-plcmap-1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit

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Switch(config-pmap)# class-map cm-2


Switch(config-pmap-c)# match ip dscp 2
Switch(config-pmap-c)# service-policy port-plcmap-1
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# class-map cm-3
Switch(config-pmap-c)# match ip dscp 3
Switch(config-pmap-c)# service-policy port-plcmap-2
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# class-map cm-4
Switch(config-pmap-c)# trust dscp
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config)# interface vlan 10
Switch(config-if)# ser input vlan-plcmap
Switch(config-if)# exit
Switch(config)# exit
Switch#

Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic by Using Aggregate Policers


By using an aggregate policer, you can create a policer that is shared by multiple traffic classes within
the same policy map. However, you cannot use the aggregate policer across different policy maps or
ports.
You can configure aggregate policers only in nonhierarchical policy maps on physical ports.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create an aggregate policer:

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos aggregate-policer Define the policer parameters that can be applied to multiple traffic
aggregate-policer-name rate-bps burst-byte classes within the same policy map.
exceed-action {drop | By default, no aggregate policer is defined. For information on the
policed-dscp-transmit} number of policers supported, see the “Standard QoS Configuration
Guidelines” section on page 33-32.
• For aggregate-policer-name, specify the name of the aggregate
policer.
• For rate-bps, specify average traffic rate in bits per second
(b/s). The range is 8000 to 1000000000.
• For burst-byte, specify the normal burst size in bytes. The range
is 8000 to 1000000.
• Specify the action to take when the rates are exceeded. Use the
exceed-action drop keywords to drop the packet. Use the
exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit keywords to mark down
the DSCP value (by using the policed-DSCP map) and to send
the packet. For more information, see the “Configuring the
Policed-DSCP Map” section on page 33-61.
Step 3 class-map [match-all | match-any] Create a class map to classify traffic as necessary. For more
class-map-name information, see the “Classifying Traffic by Using Class Maps”
section on page 33-45.

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Command Purpose
Step 4 policy-map policy-map-name Create a policy map by entering the policy map name, and enter
policy-map configuration mode.
For more information, see the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking
Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps” section on
page 33-47.
Step 5 class class-map-name Define a traffic classification, and enter policy-map class
configuration mode.
For more information, see the “Classifying, Policing, and Marking
Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps” section on
page 33-47.
Step 6 police aggregate aggregate-policer-name Apply an aggregate policer to multiple classes in the same policy
map.
For aggregate-policer-name, enter the name specified in Step 2.
Step 7 exit Return to global configuration mode.
Step 8 interface interface-id Specify the port to attach to the policy map, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 9 service-policy input policy-map-name Specify the policy-map name, and apply it to an ingress port.
Only one policy map per ingress port is supported.
Step 10 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 11 show mls qos aggregate-policer Verify your entries.
[aggregate-policer-name]
Step 12 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To remove the specified aggregate policer from a policy map, use the no police aggregate
aggregate-policer-name policy map configuration mode. To delete an aggregate policer and its
parameters, use the no mls qos aggregate-policer aggregate-policer-name global configuration
command.
This example shows how to create an aggregate policer and attach it to multiple classes within a policy
map. In the configuration, the IP ACLs permit traffic from network 10.1.0.0 and from host 11.3.1.1. For
traffic coming from network 10.1.0.0, the DSCP in the incoming packets is trusted. For traffic coming
from host 11.3.1.1, the DSCP in the packet is changed to 56. The traffic rate from the 10.1.0.0 network
and from host 11.3.1.1 is policed. If the traffic exceeds an average rate of 48000 b/s and a normal burst
size of 8000 bytes, its DSCP is marked down (based on the policed-DSCP map) and sent. The policy
map is attached to an ingress port.
Switch(config)# access-list 1 permit 10.1.0.0 0.0.255.255
Switch(config)# access-list 2 permit 11.3.1.1
Switch(config)# mls qos aggregate-police transmit1 48000 8000 exceed-action
policed-dscp-transmit
Switch(config)# class-map ipclass1
Switch(config-cmap)# match access-group 1
Switch(config-cmap)# exit
Switch(config)# class-map ipclass2
Switch(config-cmap)# match access-group 2
Switch(config-cmap)# exit
Switch(config)# policy-map aggflow1
Switch(config-pmap)# class ipclass1

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Switch(config-pmap-c)# trust dscp


Switch(config-pmap-c)# police aggregate transmit1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# class ipclass2
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp 56
Switch(config-pmap-c)# police aggregate transmit1
Switch(config-pmap-c)# exit
Switch(config-pmap)# exit
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# service-policy input aggflow1
Switch(config-if)# exit

Configuring DSCP Maps


These sections contain this configuration information:
• Configuring the CoS-to-DSCP Map, page 33-59 (optional)
• Configuring the IP-Precedence-to-DSCP Map, page 33-60 (optional)
• Configuring the Policed-DSCP Map, page 33-61 (optional, unless the null settings in the map are
not appropriate)
• Configuring the DSCP-to-CoS Map, page 33-62 (optional)
• Configuring the DSCP-to-DSCP-Mutation Map, page 33-63 (optional, unless the null settings in the
map are not appropriate)
All the maps, except the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map, are globally defined and are applied to all ports.

Configuring the CoS-to-DSCP Map


You use the CoS-to-DSCP map to map CoS values in incoming packets to a DSCP value that QoS uses
internally to represent the priority of the traffic.
Table 33-12 shows the default CoS-to-DSCP map.

Table 33-12 Default CoS-to-DSCP Map

CoS Value DSCP Value


0 0
1 8
2 16
3 24
4 32
5 40
6 48
7 56

If these values are not appropriate for your network, you need to modify them.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to modify the CoS-to-DSCP map. This
procedure is optional.

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Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos map cos-dscp dscp1...dscp8 Modify the CoS-to-DSCP map.
For dscp1...dscp8, enter eight DSCP values that correspond to CoS values
0 to 7. Separate each DSCP value with a space.
The DSCP range is 0 to 63.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos maps cos-dscp Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default map, use the no mls qos cos-dscp global configuration command.
This example shows how to modify and display the CoS-to-DSCP map:
Switch(config)# mls qos map cos-dscp 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
Switch(config)# end
Switch# show mls qos maps cos-dscp

Cos-dscp map:
cos: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
--------------------------------
dscp: 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45

Configuring the IP-Precedence-to-DSCP Map


You use the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map to map IP precedence values in incoming packets to a DSCP
value that QoS uses internally to represent the priority of the traffic.
Table 33-13 shows the default IP-precedence-to-DSCP map:

Table 33-13 Default IP-Precedence-to-DSCP Map

IP Precedence Value DSCP Value


0 0
1 8
2 16
3 24
4 32
5 40
6 48
7 56

If these values are not appropriate for your network, you need to modify them.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to modify the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.
This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos map ip-prec-dscp Modify the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.
dscp1...dscp8
For dscp1...dscp8, enter eight DSCP values that correspond to the IP
precedence values 0 to 7. Separate each DSCP value with a space.
The DSCP range is 0 to 63.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos maps ip-prec-dscp Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default map, use the no mls qos ip-prec-dscp global configuration command.
This example shows how to modify and display the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map:
Switch(config)# mls qos map ip-prec-dscp 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
Switch(config)# end
Switch# show mls qos maps ip-prec-dscp

IpPrecedence-dscp map:
ipprec: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
--------------------------------
dscp: 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45

Configuring the Policed-DSCP Map


You use the policed-DSCP map to mark down a DSCP value to a new value as the result of a policing
and marking action.
The default policed-DSCP map is a null map, which maps an incoming DSCP value to the same DSCP
value.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to modify the policed-DSCP map. This
procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos map policed-dscp dscp-list to Modify the policed-DSCP map.
mark-down-dscp
• For dscp-list, enter up to eight DSCP values separated by spaces.
Then enter the to keyword.
• For mark-down-dscp, enter the corresponding policed (marked down)
DSCP value.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos maps policed-dscp Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

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To return to the default map, use the no mls qos policed-dscp global configuration command.
This example shows how to map DSCP 50 to 57 to a marked-down DSCP value of 0:
Switch(config)# mls qos map policed-dscp 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 to 0
Switch(config)# end
Switch# show mls qos maps policed-dscp
Policed-dscp map:
d1 : d2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
---------------------------------------
0 : 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
1 : 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
2 : 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
3 : 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
4 : 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49
5 : 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 58 59
6 : 60 61 62 63

Note In this policed-DSCP map, the marked-down DSCP values are shown in the body of the matrix. The d1
column specifies the most-significant digit of the original DSCP; the d2 row specifies the
least-significant digit of the original DSCP. The intersection of the d1 and d2 values provides the
marked-down value. For example, an original DSCP value of 53 corresponds to a marked-down DSCP
value of 0.

Configuring the DSCP-to-CoS Map


You use the DSCP-to-CoS map to generate a CoS value, which is used to select one of the four egress
queues.
Table 33-14 shows the default DSCP-to-CoS map.

Table 33-14 Default DSCP-to-CoS Map

DSCP Value CoS Value


0–7 0
8–15 1
16–23 2
24–31 3
32–39 4
40–47 5
48–55 6
56–63 7

If these values are not appropriate for your network, you need to modify them.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to modify the DSCP-to-CoS map. This
procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos map dscp-cos dscp-list to cos Modify the DSCP-to-CoS map.
• For dscp-list, enter up to eight DSCP values separated by spaces.
Then enter the to keyword.
• For cos, enter the CoS value to which the DSCP values correspond.
The DSCP range is 0 to 63; the CoS range is 0 to 7.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos maps dscp-to-cos Verify your entries.
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default map, use the no mls qos dscp-cos global configuration command.
This example shows how to map DSCP values 0, 8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48, and 50 to CoS value 0 and to
display the map:
Switch(config)# mls qos map dscp-cos 0 8 16 24 32 40 48 50 to 0
Switch(config)# end
Switch# show mls qos maps dscp-cos
Dscp-cos map:
d1 : d2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
---------------------------------------
0 : 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01
1 : 01 01 01 01 01 01 00 02 02 02
2 : 02 02 02 02 00 03 03 03 03 03
3 : 03 03 00 04 04 04 04 04 04 04
4 : 00 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 00 06
5 : 00 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 07 07
6 : 07 07 07 07

Note In the above DSCP-to-CoS map, the CoS values are shown in the body of the matrix. The d1 column
specifies the most-significant digit of the DSCP; the d2 row specifies the least-significant digit of the
DSCP. The intersection of the d1 and d2 values provides the CoS value. For example, in the
DSCP-to-CoS map, a DSCP value of 08 corresponds to a CoS value of 0.

Configuring the DSCP-to-DSCP-Mutation Map


If two QoS domains have different DSCP definitions, use the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map to translate
one set of DSCP values to match the definition of another domain. You apply the
DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map to the receiving port (ingress mutation) at the boundary of a QoS
administrative domain.
With ingress mutation, the new DSCP value overwrites the one in the packet, and QoS treats the packet
with this new value. The switch sends the packet out the port with the new DSCP value.
You can configure multiple DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation maps on an ingress port. The default
DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map is a null map, which maps an incoming DSCP value to the same DSCP
value.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to modify the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map.
This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos map dscp-mutation Modify the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map.
dscp-mutation-name in-dscp to out-dscp
• For dscp-mutation-name, enter the mutation map name. You can
create more than one map by specifying a new name.
• For in-dscp, enter up to eight DSCP values separated by spaces.
Then enter the to keyword.
• For out-dscp, enter a single DSCP value.
The DSCP range is 0 to 63.
Step 3 interface interface-id Specify the port to which to attach the map, and enter interface
configuration mode.
Valid interfaces include physical ports.
Step 4 mls qos trust dscp Configure the ingress port as a DSCP-trusted port. By default, the port
is not trusted.
Step 5 mls qos dscp-mutation Apply the map to the specified ingress DSCP-trusted port.
dscp-mutation-name
For dscp-mutation-name, enter the mutation map name specified in
Step 2.
Step 6 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 7 show mls qos maps dscp-mutation Verify your entries.
Step 8 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default map, use the no mls qos dscp-mutation dscp-mutation-name global
configuration command.
This example shows how to define the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map. All the entries that are not
explicitly configured are not modified (remains as specified in the null map):
Switch(config)# mls qos map dscp-mutation mutation1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 to 0
Switch(config)# mls qos map dscp-mutation mutation1 8 9 10 11 12 13 to 10
Switch(config)# mls qos map dscp-mutation mutation1 20 21 22 to 20
Switch(config)# mls qos map dscp-mutation mutation1 30 31 32 33 34 to 30
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust dscp
Switch(config-if)# mls qos dscp-mutation mutation1
Switch(config-if)# end
Switch# show mls qos maps dscp-mutation mutation1
Dscp-dscp mutation map:
mutation1:
d1 : d2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
---------------------------------------
0 : 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 10 10
1 : 10 10 10 10 14 15 16 17 18 19
2 : 20 20 20 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
3 : 30 30 30 30 30 35 36 37 38 39
4 : 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49
5 : 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
6 : 60 61 62 63

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Note In the above DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map, the mutated values are shown in the body of the matrix. The
d1 column specifies the most-significant digit of the original DSCP; the d2 row specifies the
least-significant digit of the original DSCP. The intersection of the d1 and d2 values provides the mutated
value. For example, a DSCP value of 12 corresponds to a mutated value of 10.

Configuring Ingress Queue Characteristics


Depending on the complexity of your network and your QoS solution, you might need to perform all of
the tasks in the next sections. You will need to make decisions about these characteristics:
• Which packets are assigned (by DSCP or CoS value) to each queue?
• What drop percentage thresholds apply to each queue, and which CoS or DSCP values map to each
threshold?
• How much of the available buffer space is allocated between the queues?
• How much of the available bandwidth is allocated between the queues?
• Is there traffic (such as voice) that should be given high priority?
These sections contain this configuration information:
• Mapping DSCP or CoS Values to an Ingress Queue and Setting WTD Thresholds, page 33-65
(optional)
• Allocating Buffer Space Between the Ingress Queues, page 33-67 (optional)
• Allocating Bandwidth Between the Ingress Queues, page 33-67 (optional)
• Configuring the Ingress Priority Queue, page 33-68 (optional)

Mapping DSCP or CoS Values to an Ingress Queue and Setting WTD Thresholds
You can prioritize traffic by placing packets with particular DSCPs or CoSs into certain queues and
adjusting the queue thresholds so that packets with lower priorities are dropped.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to map DSCP or CoS values to an ingress queue
and to set WTD thresholds. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map Map DSCP or CoS values to an ingress queue and to a threshold ID.
queue queue-id threshold threshold-id By default, DSCP values 0–39 and 48–63 are mapped to queue 1 and
dscp1...dscp8 threshold 1. DSCP values 40–47 are mapped to queue 2 and threshold 1.
or
By default, CoS values 0–4, 6, and 7 are mapped to queue 1 and threshold
mls qos srr-queue input cos-map 1. CoS value 5 is mapped to queue 2 and threshold 1.
queue queue-id threshold threshold-id
• For queue-id, the range is 1 to 2.
cos1...cos8
• For threshold-id, the range is 1 to 3. The drop-threshold percentage
for threshold 3 is predefined. It is set to the queue-full state.
• For dscp1...dscp8, enter up to eight values, and separate each value
with a space. The range is 0 to 63.
• For cos1...cos8, enter up to eight values, and separate each value with
a space. The range is 0 to 7.
Step 3 mls qos srr-queue input threshold Assign the two WTD threshold percentages for (threshold 1 and 2) to an
queue-id threshold-percentage1 ingress queue. The default, both thresholds are set to 100 percent.
threshold-percentage2
• For queue-id, the range is 1 to 2.
• For threshold-percentage1 threshold-percentage2, the range is 1 to
100. Separate each value with a space.
Each threshold value is a percentage of the total number of queue
descriptors allocated for the queue.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos maps Verify your entries.
The DSCP input queue threshold map appears as a matrix. The d1 column
specifies the most-significant digit of the DSCP number; the d2 row
specifies the least-significant digit in the DSCP number. The intersection
of the d1 and the d2 values provides the queue ID and threshold ID; for
example, queue 2 and threshold 1 (02-01).
The CoS input queue threshold map shows the CoS value in the top row
and the corresponding queue ID and threshold ID in the second row; for
example, queue 2 and threshold 2 (2-2).
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default CoS input queue threshold map or the default DSCP input queue threshold map,
use the no mls qos srr-queue input cos-map or the no mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map global
configuration command. To return to the default WTD threshold percentages, use the no mls qos
srr-queue input threshold queue-id global configuration command.

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This example shows how to map DSCP values 0 to 6 to ingress queue 1 and to threshold 1 with a drop
threshold of 50 percent. It maps DSCP values 20 to 26 to ingress queue 1 and to threshold 2 with a drop
threshold of 70 percent:
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 1 threshold 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 1 threshold 2 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input threshold 1 50 70

In this example, the DSCP values (0 to 6) are assigned the WTD threshold of 50 percent and will be
dropped sooner than the DSCP values (20 to 26) assigned to the WTD threshold of 70 percent.

Allocating Buffer Space Between the Ingress Queues


You define the ratio (allocate the amount of space) with which to divide the ingress buffers between the
two queues. The buffer and the bandwidth allocation control how much data can be buffered before
packets are dropped.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to allocate the buffers between the ingress
queues. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos srr-queue input buffers Allocate the buffers between the ingress queues
percentage1 percentage2
By default 90 percent of the buffers are allocated to queue 1, and 10
percent of the buffers are allocated to queue 2.
For percentage1 percentage2, the range is 0 to 100. Separate each value
with a space.
You should allocate the buffers so that the queues can handle any
incoming bursty traffic.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos interface buffer Verify your entries.
or
show mls qos input-queue
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no mls qos srr-queue input buffers global configuration
command.
This example shows how to allocate 60 percent of the buffer space to ingress queue 1 and 40 percent of
the buffer space to ingress queue 2:
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input buffers 60 40

Allocating Bandwidth Between the Ingress Queues


You need to specify how much of the available bandwidth is allocated between the ingress queues. The
ratio of the weights is the ratio of the frequency in which the SRR scheduler sends packets from each
queue. The bandwidth and the buffer allocation control how much data can be buffered before packets
are dropped. On ingress queues, SRR operates only in shared mode.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to allocate bandwidth between the ingress
queues. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth Assign shared round robin weights to the ingress queues.
weight1 weight2
The default setting for weight1 and weight2 is 4 (1/2 of the bandwidth is
equally shared between the two queues).
For weight1 and weight2, the range is 1 to 100. Separate each value with
a space.
SRR services the priority queue for its configured weight as specified by
the bandwidth keyword in the mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue
queue-id bandwidth weight global configuration command. Then, SRR
shares the remaining bandwidth with both ingress queues and services
them as specified by the weights configured with the mls qos srr-queue
input bandwidth weight1 weight2 global configuration command. For
more information, see the “Configuring the Ingress Priority Queue”
section on page 33-68.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos interface queueing Verify your entries.
or
show mls qos input-queue
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth global configuration
command.
This example shows how to assign the ingress bandwidth to the queues. Priority queueing is disabled,
and the shared bandwidth ratio allocated to queue 1 is 25/(25+75) and to queue 2 is 75/(25+75):
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue 2 bandwidth 0
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth 25 75

Configuring the Ingress Priority Queue


You should use the priority queue only for traffic that needs to be expedited (for example, voice traffic,
which needs minimum delay and jitter).
The priority queue is guaranteed part of the bandwidth to reduce the delay and jitter under heavy network
traffic on an oversubscribed ring (when there is more traffic than the backplane can carry, and the queues
are full and dropping frames).
SRR services the priority queue for its configured weight as specified by the bandwidth keyword in the
mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue queue-id bandwidth weight global configuration command.
Then, SRR shares the remaining bandwidth with both ingress queues and services them as specified by
the weights configured with the mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth weight1 weight2 global
configuration command.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the priority queue. This procedure
is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos srr-queue input Assign a queue as the priority queue and guarantee bandwidth on the
priority-queue queue-id bandwidth internal ring if the ring is congested.
weight
By default, the priority queue is queue 2, and 10 percent of the bandwidth
is allocated to it.
• For queue-id, the range is 1 to 2.
• For bandwidth weight, assign the bandwidth percentage of the
internal ring. The range is 0 to 40. The amount of bandwidth that can
be guaranteed is restricted because a large value affects the entire ring
and can degrade performance.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos interface queueing Verify your entries.
or
show mls qos input-queue
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue queue-id global
configuration command. To disable priority queueing, set the bandwidth weight to 0, for example, mls
qos srr-queue input priority-queue queue-id bandwidth 0.
This example shows how to assign the ingress bandwidths to the queues. Queue 1 is the priority queue
with 10 percent of the bandwidth allocated to it. The bandwidth ratios allocated to queues 1 and 2 is
4/(4+4). SRR services queue 1 (the priority queue) first for its configured 10 percent bandwidth. Then
SRR equally shares the remaining 90 percent of the bandwidth between queues 1 and 2 by allocating 45
percent to each queue:
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue 1 bandwidth 10
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth 4 4

Configuring Egress Queue Characteristics


Depending on the complexity of your network and your QoS solution, you might need to perform all of
the tasks in the next sections. You will need to make decisions about these characteristics:
• Which packets are mapped by DSCP or CoS value to each queue and threshold ID?
• What drop percentage thresholds apply to the queue-set (four egress queues per port), and how much
reserved and maximum memory is needed for the traffic type?
• How much of the fixed buffer space is allocated to the queue-set?
• Does the bandwidth of the port need to be rate limited?
• How often should the egress queues be serviced and which technique (shaped, shared, or both)
should be used?

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These sections contain this configuration information:


• Configuration Guidelines, page 33-70
• Allocating Buffer Space to and Setting WTD Thresholds for an Egress Queue-Set, page 33-70
(optional)
• Mapping DSCP or CoS Values to an Egress Queue and to a Threshold ID, page 33-72 (optional)
• Configuring SRR Shaped Weights on Egress Queues, page 33-73 (optional)
• Configuring SRR Shared Weights on Egress Queues, page 33-74 (optional)
• Configuring the Egress Expedite Queue, page 33-75 (optional)
• Limiting the Bandwidth on an Egress Interface, page 33-76 (optional)

Configuration Guidelines
Follow these guidelines when the expedite queue is enabled or the egress queues are serviced based on
their SRR weights:
• If the egress expedite queue is enabled, it overrides the SRR shaped and shared weights for queue 1.
• If the egress expedite queue is disabled and the SRR shaped and shared weights are configured, the
shaped mode overrides the shared mode for queue 1, and SRR services this queue in shaped mode.
• If the egress expedite queue is disabled and the SRR shaped weights are not configured, SRR
services this queue in shared mode.

Allocating Buffer Space to and Setting WTD Thresholds for an Egress Queue-Set
You can guarantee the availability of buffers, set WTD thresholds, and configure the maximum
allocation for a queue-set by using the mls qos queue-set output qset-id threshold queue-id
drop-threshold1 drop-threshold2 reserved-threshold maximum-threshold global configuration commands.
Each threshold value is a percentage of the queues allocated buffers, which you specify by using the mls
qos queue-set output qset-id buffers allocation1 ... allocation4 global configuration command. The
queues use WTD to support distinct drop percentages for different traffic classes.

Note The egress queue default settings are suitable for most situations. You should change them only when
you have a thorough understanding of the egress queues and if these settings do not meet your QoS
solution.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to configure the memory allocation and to drop
thresholds for a queue-set. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos queue-set output qset-id Allocate buffers to a queue-set.
buffers allocation1 ... allocation4
By default, all allocation values are equally mapped among the four
queues (25, 25, 25, 25). Each queue has 1/4 of the buffer space.
• For qset-id, enter the ID of the queue-set. The range is 1 to 2. Each
port belongs to a queue-set, which defines all the characteristics of the
four egress queues per port.
• For allocation1 ... allocation4, specify four percentages, one for each
queue in the queue-set. For allocation1, allocation3, and allocation4,
the range is 0 to 99. For allocation2, the range is 1 to 100 (including
the CPU buffer).
Allocate buffers according to the importance of the traffic; for example,
give a large percentage of the buffer to the queue with the highest-priority
traffic.
Step 3 mls qos queue-set output qset-id Configure the WTD thresholds, guarantee the availability of buffers, and
threshold queue-id drop-threshold1 configure the maximum memory allocation for the queue-set (four egress
drop-threshold2 reserved-threshold queues per port).
maximum-threshold
By default, the WTD thresholds for queues 1, 3, and 4 are set to 100
percent. The thresholds for queue 2 are set to 200 percent. The reserved
thresholds for queues 1, 2, 3, and 4 are set to 50 percent. The maximum
thresholds for all queues are set to 400 percent.
• For qset-id, enter the ID of the queue-set specified in Step 2. The
range is 1 to 2.
• For queue-id, enter the specific queue in the queue-set on which the
command is performed. The range is 1 to 4.
• For drop-threshold1 drop-threshold2, specify the two WTD
thresholds expressed as a percentage of the queue’s allocated
memory. The range is 1 to 3200 percent.
• For reserved-threshold, enter the amount of memory to be guaranteed
(reserved) for the queue expressed as a percentage of the allocated
memory. The range is 1 to 100 percent.
• For maximum-threshold, enable a queue in the full condition to obtain
more buffers than are reserved for it. This is the maximum memory
the queue can have before the packets are dropped if the common pool
is not empty. The range is 1 to 3200 percent.
Step 4 interface interface-id Specify the port of the outbound traffic, and enter interface configuration
mode.
Step 5 queue-set qset-id Map the port to a queue-set.
For qset-id, enter the ID of the queue-set specified in Step 2. The range is
1 to 2. The default is 1.
Step 6 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.

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Command Purpose
Step 7 show mls qos interface [interface-id] Verify your entries.
buffers
Step 8 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no mls qos queue-set output qset-id buffers global configuration
command. To return to the default WTD threshold percentages, use the no mls qos queue-set output
qset-id threshold [queue-id] global configuration command.
This example shows how to map a port to queue-set 2. It allocates 40 percent of the buffer space to egress
queue 1 and 20 percent to egress queues 2, 3, and 4. It configures the drop thresholds for queue 2 to 40
and 60 percent of the allocated memory, guarantees (reserves) 100 percent of the allocated memory, and
configures 200 percent as the maximum memory that this queue can have before packets are dropped:
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 buffers 40 20 20 20
Switch(config)# mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 2 40 60 100 200
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
lSwitch(config-if)# queue-set 2

Mapping DSCP or CoS Values to an Egress Queue and to a Threshold ID


You can prioritize traffic by placing packets with particular DSCPs or costs of service into certain queues
and adjusting the queue thresholds so that packets with lower priorities are dropped.

Note The egress queue default settings are suitable for most situations. You should change them only when
you have a thorough understanding of the egress queues and if these settings do not meet your QoS
solution.

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Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to map DSCP or CoS values to an egress queue
and to a threshold ID. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map Map DSCP or CoS values to an egress queue and to a threshold ID.
queue queue-id threshold threshold-id By default, DSCP values 0–15 are mapped to queue 2 and threshold 1.
dscp1...dscp8 DSCP values 16–31 are mapped to queue 3 and threshold 1. DSCP values
or 32–39 and 48–63 are mapped to queue 4 and threshold 1. DSCP values
40–47 are mapped to queue 1 and threshold 1.
mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
queue queue-id threshold threshold-id By default, CoS values 0 and 1 are mapped to queue 2 and threshold 1.
cos1...cos8 CoS values 2 and 3 are mapped to queue 3 and threshold 1. CoS values 4,
6, and 7 are mapped to queue 4 and threshold 1. CoS value 5 is mapped to
queue 1 and threshold 1.
• For queue-id, the range is 1 to 4.
• For threshold-id, the range is 1 to 3. The drop-threshold percentage
for threshold 3 is predefined. It is set to the queue-full state.
• For dscp1...dscp8, enter up to eight values, and separate each value
with a space. The range is 0 to 63.
• For cos1...cos8, enter up to eight values, and separate each value with
a space. The range is 0 to 7.
Step 3 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 4 show mls qos maps Verify your entries.
The DSCP output queue threshold map appears as a matrix. The d1
column specifies the most-significant digit of the DSCP number; the d2
row specifies the least-significant digit in the DSCP number. The
intersection of the d1 and the d2 values provides the queue ID and
threshold ID; for example, queue 2 and threshold 1 (02-01).
The CoS output queue threshold map shows the CoS value in the top row
and the corresponding queue ID and threshold ID in the second row; for
example, queue 2 and threshold 2 (2-2).
Step 5 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default DSCP output queue threshold map or the default CoS output queue threshold
map, use the no mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map or the no mls qos srr-queue output cos-map
global configuration command.
This example shows how to map DSCP values 10 and 11 to egress queue 1 and to threshold 2:
Switch(config)# mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 1 threshold 2 10 11

Configuring SRR Shaped Weights on Egress Queues


You can specify how much of the available bandwidth is allocated to each queue. The ratio of the weights
is the ratio of frequency in which the SRR scheduler sends packets from each queue.

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You can configure the egress queues for shaped or shared weights, or both. Use shaping to smooth bursty
traffic or to provide a smoother output over time. For information about shaped weights, see the “SRR
Shaping and Sharing” section on page 33-14. For information about shared weights, see the
“Configuring SRR Shared Weights on Egress Queues” section on page 33-74.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to assign the shaped weights and to enable
bandwidth shaping on the four egress queues mapped to a port. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the port of the outbound traffic, and enter interface configuration
mode.
Step 3 srr-queue bandwidth shape weight1 Assign SRR weights to the egress queues.
weight2 weight3 weight4
By default, weight1 is set to 25; weight2, weight3, and weight4 are set to 0,
and these queues are in shared mode.
For weight1 weight2 weight3 weight4, enter the weights to control the
percentage of the port that is shaped. The inverse ratio (1/weight) controls
the shaping bandwidth for this queue. Separate each value with a space.
The range is 0 to 65535.
If you configure a weight of 0, the corresponding queue operates in shared
mode. The weight specified with the srr-queue bandwidth shape
command is ignored, and the weights specified with the srr-queue
bandwidth share interface configuration command for a queue come into
effect. When configuring queues in the same queue-set for both shaping
and sharing, make sure that you configure the lowest number queue for
shaping.
The shaped mode overrides the shared mode.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface interface-id Verify your entries.
queueing
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no srr-queue bandwidth shape interface configuration
command.
This example shows how to configure bandwidth shaping on queue 1. Because the weight ratios for
queues 2, 3, and 4 are set to 0, these queues operate in shared mode. The bandwidth weight for queue 1
is 1/8, which is 12.5 percent:
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# srr-queue bandwidth shape 8 0 0 0

Configuring SRR Shared Weights on Egress Queues


In shared mode, the queues share the bandwidth among them according to the configured weights. The
bandwidth is guaranteed at this level but not limited to it. For example, if a queue empties and does not
require a share of the link, the remaining queues can expand into the unused bandwidth and share it
among them. With sharing, the ratio of the weights controls the frequency of dequeuing; the absolute
values are meaningless.

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Note The egress queue default settings are suitable for most situations. You should change them only when
you have a thorough understanding of the egress queues and if these settings do not meet your QoS
solution.

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to assign the shared weights and to enable
bandwidth sharing on the four egress queues mapped to a port. This procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the port of the outbound traffic, and enter interface configuration
mode.
Step 3 srr-queue bandwidth share weight1 Assign SRR weights to the egress queues.
weight2 weight3 weight4
By default, all four weights are 25 (1/4 of the bandwidth is allocated to
each queue).
For weight1 weight2 weight3 weight4, enter the weights to control the
ratio of the frequency in which the SRR scheduler sends packets. Separate
each value with a space. The range is 1 to 255.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface interface-id Verify your entries.
queueing
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no srr-queue bandwidth share interface configuration
command.
This example shows how to configure the weight ratio of the SRR scheduler running on an egress port.
Four queues are used, and the bandwidth ratio allocated for each queue in shared mode is 1/(1+2+3+4),
2/(1+2+3+4), 3/(1+2+3+4), and 4/(1+2+3+4), which is 10 percent, 20 percent, 30 percent, and 40
percent for queues 1, 2, 3, and 4. This means that queue 4 has four times the bandwidth of queue 1, twice
the bandwidth of queue 2, and one-and-a-third times the bandwidth of queue 3.
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# srr-queue bandwidth share 1 2 3 4

Configuring the Egress Expedite Queue


You can ensure that certain packets have priority over all others by queuing them in the egress expedite
queue. SRR services this queue until it is empty before servicing the other queues.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to enable the egress expedite queue. This
procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 mls qos Enable QoS on a switch.
Step 3 interface interface-id Specify the egress port, and enter interface configuration mode.

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Command Purpose
Step 4 priority-queue out Enable the egress expedite queue, which is disabled by default.
When you configure this command, the SRR weight and queue size ratios
are affected because there is one less queue participating in SRR. This
means that weight1 in the srr-queue bandwidth shape or the srr-queue
bandwidth share command is ignored (not used in the ratio calculation).
Step 5 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 6 show running-config Verify your entries.
Step 7 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To disable the egress expedite queue, use the no priority-queue out interface configuration command.
This example shows how to enable the egress expedite queue when the SRR weights are configured. The
egress expedite queue overrides the configured SRR weights.
Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# srr-queue bandwidth shape 25 0 0 0
Switch(config-if)# srr-queue bandwidth share 30 20 25 25
Switch(config-if)# priority-queue out
Switch(config-if)# end

Limiting the Bandwidth on an Egress Interface


You can limit the bandwidth on an egress port. For example, if a customer pays only for a small
percentage of a high-speed link, you can limit the bandwidth to that amount.

Note The egress queue default settings are suitable for most situations. You should change them only when
you have a thorough understanding of the egress queues and if these settings do not meet your QoS
solution.

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to limit the bandwidth on an egress port. This
procedure is optional.

Command Purpose
Step 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Step 2 interface interface-id Specify the port to be rate limited, and enter interface configuration mode.
Step 3 srr-queue bandwidth limit weight1 Specify the percentage of the port speed to which the port should be
limited. The range is 10 to 90.
By default, the port is not rate limited and is set to 100 percent.
Step 4 end Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5 show mls qos interface [interface-id] Verify your entries.
queueing
Step 6 copy running-config startup-config (Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

To return to the default setting, use the no srr-queue bandwidth limit interface configuration command.

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This example shows how to limit the bandwidth on a port to 80 percent:


Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet0/1
Switch(config-if)# srr-queue bandwidth limit 80

When you configure this command to 80 percent, the port is idle 20 percent of the time. The line rate
drops to 80 percent of the connected speed, which is 800 Mb/s. These values are not exact because the
hardware adjusts the line rate in increments of six.

Displaying Standard QoS Information


To display standard QoS information, use one or more of the privileged EXEC commands in
Table 33-15:

Table 33-15 Commands for Displaying Standard QoS Information

Command Purpose
show class-map [class-map-name] Display QoS class maps, which define the match criteria to
classify traffic.
show mls qos Display global QoS configuration information.
show mls qos aggregate-policer Display the aggregate policer configuration.
[aggregate-policer-name]
show mls qos input-queue Display QoS settings for the ingress queues.
show mls qos interface [interface-id] [buffers | policers | Display QoS information at the port level, including the buffer
queueing | statistics] allocation, which ports have configured policers, the queueing
strategy, and the ingress and egress statistics.
show mls qos maps [cos-dscp | cos-input-q | Display QoS mapping information.
cos-output-q | dscp-cos | dscp-input-q | dscp-mutation
dscp-mutation-name | dscp-output-q | ip-prec-dscp |
policed-dscp]
show mls qos queue-set [qset-id] Display QoS settings for the egress queues.
show mls qos vlan vlan-id Display the policy maps attached to the specified SVI.
show policy-map [policy-map-name [class Display QoS policy maps, which define classification criteria for
class-map-name]] incoming traffic.
Note Do not use the show policy-map interface privileged
EXEC command to display classification information
for incoming traffic. The control-plane and interface
keywords are not supported, and the statistics shown in
the display should be ignored.
show running-config | include rewrite Display the DSCP transparency setting.

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