Overview

When a packet arrives, depending on your configuration, a device assigns a set of QoS priority parameters to the packet based on either a certain priority field carried in the packet or the port priority of the incoming port. This process is called "priority mapping." During this process, the device can modify the priority of the packet depending on device status. The set of QoS priority parameters decides the scheduling priority and forwarding priority of the packet.

Priority mapping is implemented with priority mapping tables and involves priorities such as 802.11e priority, 802.1p priority, DSCP, EXP, IP precedence, local precedence, and drop precedence.