09-10-2009 11:02 AM - edited 03-04-2019 06:00 AM
I have a WS-X6408A-GBIC line-card in my 7609. I am doing QOS on this router, but what is odd to me is that my COS 5 value is not mapped to my Rx strict-priority queue 2?
This does not look normal, but maybe it is?? I have seen other examples with the same queuing structure and COS 5 is mapped to the queue 2. This is what the Rx queuing looks like on one of my Gig interfaces:
Queueing Mode In Rx direction: mode-cos
Receive queues [type = 1p1q4t]:
Queue Id Scheduling Num of thresholds
-----------------------------------------
1 Standard 4
2 Priority 1
queue tail-drop-thresholds
--------------------------
1 100[1] 100[2] 100[3] 100[4]
queue thresh cos-map
---------------------------------------
1 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1 2
1 3
1 4
2 1
Packets dropped on Receive:
BPDU packets: 0
queue thresh dropped [cos-map]
---------------------------------------------------
1 1 0 [0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ]
* - shared receive counter
As you can see, COS values all mapped to Rx queue 1. I appreciate your help!
Thanks,
Ethan
09-10-2009 12:16 PM
According to the documentation:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/qos/command/reference/qos_n1.html#wp1015635
It's default behavior. You can manually change it to Queue 2.
___
Edison.
09-10-2009 12:28 PM
Edison,
I have actually tried that, "priority-queue cos-map 1 5" and it does nothing. It says something like propagating to all interfaces, but when I look at the queuing on the interface, nothing changes?
Do you happen to know how to manually change it to Q2?
Thanks again..
09-10-2009 12:45 PM
The link I posted also indicates the Queue will always be 1.
I don't have an equipment at the moment for testing, if you wish - you can open a TAC case.
I also want to point out, you should concentrate on egress priority queueing to be functioning as ingress priority queueing does not provide as much benefit.
__
Edison.
09-11-2009 10:36 AM
Edison,
I appreciate it, but all of my egress queuing is configured correctly, which why I am interested in the ingress portion. It seems to be a QOS issue and am just double checking everything, ya know?
Let me ask you this. Have you ever heard RTP packet reordering across a 2 Gig Etherchannel before? Maybe something like Interleaved packets causing VoIP issues??
I don't even know if this could be a cause for our VoIP issue, I am just having to start to look at other things besides QOS that could cause quality issues.
Thanks for you responses!
09-11-2009 10:50 AM
Let me ask you this. Have you ever heard RTP packet reordering across a 2 Gig Etherchannel before?
Not on EtherChannel as the traffic is per flow - in other words - you won't have RTP traffic equally balanced hence no reordering on the inter-switch link.
Maybe something like Interleaved packets causing VoIP issues??
Interleaving is tied to MLPPP, no issue with Giga EtherChannel.
___
Edison.
09-11-2009 11:19 AM
Thanks again!
By the way, I had already opened a TAC case a couple weeks ago on this issue. They went through all my QOS configurations with a fine tooth comb, across every router and switch hop and they said everything was provisioned correctly, which is why I am trying to think "outside the box".
I am dealing with calls that traverse 3 PBX's, 2 being VoIP PBX's with the last VoIP PBX SIP trunking to the 3rd Class5 Phone switch, across our fiber backbone with multiple router and switch hops?!
You can see I have so many variables in the mix, and it is like trying to find a needle in a hay stack!
Anyhow, I will quit rambling. Again, I appreciate your help! Have a good one!
09-11-2009 11:29 AM
IP SLA can be your friend in situations such as the one you are experiencing:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/12_4/ip_sla/configuration/guide/hsla_c.html
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