Hi Brandon,
I found this video tutorial by Kevin Wallace very helpful.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=6UJZBeK_JCs#
On Aug 29, 2013 10:40 PM, "Brandon Bigelow" <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
>
> I was wondering if someone could help me better understand queue mappings.
> The below is from the Cisco 3560 QoS guide.
>
>  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.
>
>  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.
>
> If the above is true, why do we need four maps for queues?
>
>   cos-input-q    cos-input queue map keyword
>   cos-output-q   cos-output queue map keyword
>   dscp-input-q   dscp-input queue  map keyword
>   dscp-output-q  dscp-output queue map keyword
>
> Wouldn't we only need 2 or 3 since the newly formed CoS forms the map to
> egress queue? When would we ever use the dscp-output-q? I assume it all
> comes down to what you are trusting but this statement confuses me:
> "You use the DSCP-to-CoS map to generate a CoS value, which is used to
> select one of the four egress queues. "
>
>
> Thanks for your input
>
>
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