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Classifying traffic by layer 2 characteristics, Acl rules – Avaya 580 User Manual

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Document No. 10-300077, Issue 2

25-9

80-Series QoS

Classifying Traffic by Layer 2 Characteristics

In addition to Cisco ISL tag, 802.1p tag, and physical port priority, the
switch can classify traffic by:

Source MAC address

Destination MAC address

For information about how to set a priority for a source or destination MAC
address, see “

Setting the Priority of a MAC Address

” later in this chapter.

In addition to these layer 2 characteristics, you can classify bridged IP
traffic by DiffServ code point. For more information on classifying bridged
IP traffic by DiffServ code point, see

Diffserv

later in this chapter.

Classifying Traffic by Layer 3 or Layer 4 Characteristics

ACL Rules

You can, alternately, configure the switch to classify traffic by the IP
characteristics of packets, instead of 802.1p tag priority, physical port
priority, or other layer 2 characteristics.

To assign priorities to packets by their IP characteristics, you create a rule in
an access control list (ACL). The rule can:

Set an ACL rule priority

Use the DiffServ code point

Mask the three least significant bits of the DSCP. The switch
recognizes the remaining bits as the IP precedence field.

Replace the existing DSCP with a DSCP that you specify

Use the layer 2 priority

You can specify the TCP/IP traffic that you want the rule to apply to. The
rule can apply to traffic with a specific:

IP destination address

IP source address

IP Protocol

Destination TCP or UDP port

Source TCP or UDP port

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