Configure an ipv6 diffserv ipv6 classes – NETGEAR MS510TXPP 8 Port Gigabit PoE Managed Switch User Manual
Page 205
Smart Managed Pro Switches MS510TX and MS510TXPP
Configure Quality of Service
User Manual
205
6.
Click the class name, which is a hyperlink.
The page on which you can change the class configuration displays.
7.
Change the class configuration as needed.
8.
Click the
Apply
button.
Your settings are saved.
Delete an IPv4 DiffServ Class
To delete an IPv4 DiffServ class:
1.
Connect your computer to the same network as the switch.
You can use a WiFi or wired connection to connect your computer to the network, or
connect directly to a switch that is off-network using an Ethernet cable.
2.
Launch a web browser.
3.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch.
If you do not know the IP address of the switch, see
The login window opens.
4.
Enter the switch’s password in the
Password
field.
The default password is
password
.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select
QoS > DiffServ > Advanced > Class Configuration
.
The Class Configuration page displays.
6.
Select the check box for the class name.
7.
Click the
Delete
button.
The class is removed.
Configure an IPv6 DiffServ IPv6 Classes
The IPv6 class configuration feature extends the existing QoS ACL and DiffServ functionality
by providing support for IPv6 packet classification. An Ethernet IPv6 packet is distinguished
from an IPv4 packet by its unique Ethertype value, so all IPv6 classifiers include the
Ethertype field. An IPv6 access list serves the same purpose as its IPv4 counterpart.
The destination and source IPv6 addresses use a prefix length value instead of an individual
mask to qualify them as a subnet addresses or a host addresses. The flow label is a 20-bit
number that is unique to an IPv6 packet, used by end stations to signify some form of Quality
of Service (QoS) handling in routers.
Packets that match an IPv6 classifier are allowed to be marked using only the 802.1p (CoS)
field or the IP DSCP field in the Traffic Class octet. IP precedence is not defined for IPv6.
This is not an appropriate type of packet marking.