CLI Guide

Usage Information A color map outlines the codepoint mappings to the appropriate color mapping
(green, yellow, red) for the traffic. The system uses this information use to handle
the traffic on the interface based on the traffic priority and places it into the
appropriate shaping queue. You cannot delete a DSCP color map when it is
configured on an interface. If you do, all the DSCP values are set to green (low
drop precedence). To delete the DSCP color map that is being used by one or
more interfaces, remove the DSCP map from each interface.
Example
Dell(conf)#qos dscp-color-map mymap
Related
Commands
qos dscp-color-map— associates the DSCP color map profile with an interface
so that all IP packets received on it is given a color based on that color map.
dscp— sets the number of specific DSCP values for color map profile to yellow
or red.
qos dscp-color-policy
Associates the DSCP color map profile with an interface so that all IP packets received on it is given a
color based on that color map.
Syntax
dscp-color-policy color-map-profile-name
To remove a color policy map profile, use the no dscp-color-policy color-
map-profile-name command.
Parameters
color-map-
profile-name
Enter the color map profile name. The name can have a
maximum of 32 characters.
Defaults None
Command Modes CONFIG-INTERFACE
Command History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms,
see the relevant Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
Version Description
9.8(1.0) Introduced on the Z9100-ON.
9.8(0.0P5) Introduced on the S4048-ON.
9.8(0.0P2) Introduced on the S3048-ON.
9.7(0.0) Introduced on the S6000-ON.
9.5(0.1) Introduced on the Z9500.
Version 9.5.0.0 Introduced on the Z9000, S6000, S4820T, S4810, and MXL.
Usage Information If the specified color-map does not exist, the Diffserv Manager (DSM) creates a
color map and sets all the DSCP values to green (low drop precedence).
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Quality of Service (QoS)