QoS Marking – DSCP, CoS & IP Precedence

1. Why QoS Marking Matters

A network carries many different types of traffic simultaneously — voice calls, video conferences, file transfers, web browsing, and background backups. Each has very different tolerance for delay, jitter, and packet loss. Without Quality of Service (QoS), every packet is treated identically — a VoIP frame and a large file transfer compete equally for bandwidth, causing voice to stutter and video to freeze under load.

Marking is the first and most foundational step in QoS: attaching a priority label to each packet so that every device along the path knows how to treat it. A marked packet can be queued, scheduled, dropped (or protected from dropping), and policed based on its mark — without the network device needing to re-inspect the packet contents every hop.

Traffic Type Delay Sensitivity Loss Sensitivity Typical DSCP Mark
VoIP (voice RTP) Very high — <150 ms one-way, <30 ms jitter Low — a few % loss is tolerable EF (DSCP 46)
Video conferencing High — <150 ms, low jitter Low to medium AF41 (DSCP 34)
Call signalling (SIP, H.323) Medium — tolerates some delay Medium — lost signalling causes call failure CS3 (DSCP 24)
Business-critical apps (ERP, CRM) Medium Medium AF31 (DSCP 26)
Bulk data / file transfer Low — delay is acceptable None — TCP retransmits AF11 (DSCP 10)
Background / scavenger Very low None CS1 (DSCP 8)
Default / best effort No guarantee No guarantee BE / CS0 (DSCP 0)

Related pages: QoS Overview | QoS Queuing | QoS Policing & Shaping | VLANs | 802.1Q VLAN Tagging | ACL Overview (traffic classification) | Voice VLAN | DSCP Marking & Classification Lab | MQC QoS Basics Lab

2. The Three QoS Marking Fields

Three marking fields are used in modern networks. They operate at different layers and serve different scopes. Understanding which field applies where is essential for both the CCNA exam and real-world network design.

Marking Field Layer Location in Frame/Packet Bits Values Scope
CoS (PCP) Layer 2 802.1Q tag — Priority Code Point (PCP) field 3 bits 0–7 Local — only valid on 802.1Q trunk links; lost when tag is stripped at access port
IP Precedence Layer 3 IPv4 ToS byte — upper 3 bits 3 bits 0–7 End-to-end across routed hops; older standard (largely superseded by DSCP)
DSCP Layer 3 IPv4 ToS byte / IPv6 Traffic Class — upper 6 bits (the DS field) 6 bits 0–63 End-to-end across routed hops; current industry standard (RFC 2474)
  IPv4 Type of Service (ToS) byte — 8 bits total:
  ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  Bit 7  Bit 6  Bit 5  Bit 4  Bit 3  Bit 2  Bit 1  Bit 0 │
  └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

  IP Precedence interpretation (legacy — uses upper 3 bits):
  ┌─────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  IPP (3 b)  │         Unused (5 bits)                │
  └─────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────┘
  Bits 7-5: Priority 0 (BE) to 7 (Network Control)

  DSCP / DiffServ interpretation (modern — uses upper 6 bits):
  ┌─────────────────────────────┬──────────┐
  │        DSCP (6 bits)        │ ECN(2 b) │
  │  (Differentiated Services   │          │
  │   Code Point = DS field)    │          │
  └─────────────────────────────┴──────────┘
  Bits 7-2: DSCP value 0–63
  Bits 1-0: ECN (Explicit Congestion Notification — not QoS marking)
Backward compatibility: DSCP was designed to be backward compatible with IP Precedence. The upper 3 bits of the DSCP field correspond to the 3 IP Precedence bits — so a device that only understands IP Precedence will still read the correct priority class from DSCP-marked packets (though with less granularity).

3. CoS — Class of Service (Layer 2 Marking)

CoS (Class of Service) is the Layer 2 QoS marking carried in the Priority Code Point (PCP) field of an 802.1Q VLAN tag. It is also referred to as 802.1p priority. CoS is a 3-bit field providing values 0 through 7 — where 0 is lowest priority (best effort) and 7 is highest (reserved for network control).

  802.1Q frame tag — 4 bytes total:
  ┌──────────────┬───┬──────────────────────────┐
  │  TPID        │TCI                            │
  │  (2 bytes)   │  (2 bytes)                    │
  │  0x8100      ├─────┬───┬───────────────────── │
  │              │ PCP │DEI│      VID             │
  │              │(3b) │(1b)│   (12 bits)          │
  └──────────────┴─────┴───┴──────────────────────┘
                    ▲
                    CoS / 802.1p priority (0–7)

  CoS field is ONLY present when an 802.1Q tag exists.
  → Present on: trunk links between switches/routers
  → Absent on:  access ports (tag stripped before delivery to end device)

CoS Values and Meanings

CoS Value (PCP) Binary Traffic Class (IEEE 802.1p) Typical Use
7 111 Network Control Spanning Tree, routing protocol updates
6 110 Internetwork Control OSPF, EIGRP, BGP routing protocol traffic
5 101 Voice (<10ms latency) VoIP RTP audio — highest user-data priority
4 100 Video (<100ms latency) Video conferencing, streaming video
3 011 Critical Applications Call signalling (SIP), business-critical apps
2 010 Excellent Effort Important business data
1 001 Background Bulk transfers, backups, scavenger traffic
0 000 Best Effort (default) General internet traffic, unclassified traffic
CCNA exam tip: CoS 5 = VoIP voice. CoS 4 = Video. CoS 3 = Call signalling. These three values are by far the most tested. Remember: CoS is Layer 2 and only travels on tagged (trunk) links — it is not carried in routed IP packets.

4. DSCP — Differentiated Services Code Point

DSCP (Differentiated Services Code Point) is the modern Layer 3 QoS marking standard, defined in RFC 2474 as part of the DiffServ (Differentiated Services) architecture. It uses the upper 6 bits of the IPv4 ToS byte (or the IPv6 Traffic Class byte), providing 64 possible values (0–63). DSCP markings are end-to-end — they survive routing hops and are the primary marking mechanism for enterprise and service provider QoS.

DSCP values are organised into named classes that describe forwarding behaviour. The four main DSCP classes — EF, AF, CS, and BE — each serve a distinct purpose and have standardised numeric values.

  DSCP 6-bit field values and their binary breakdown:

  DSCP decimal value = (binary value of 6 bits, reading bits 7 down to 2)

  Examples:
  DSCP 46 (EF)  = binary 101110 = bits 7-2 set to 1,0,1,1,1,0
  DSCP 34 (AF41)= binary 100010 = bits 7-2 set to 1,0,0,0,1,0
  DSCP 0  (BE)  = binary 000000 = all zero

  Decimal to per-hop behaviour name mapping:
  0   = Best Effort (BE) / CS0
  8   = CS1  (Class Selector 1)
  10  = AF11, 12 = AF12, 14 = AF13
  16  = CS2
  18  = AF21, 20 = AF22, 22 = AF23
  24  = CS3
  26  = AF31, 28 = AF32, 30 = AF33
  32  = CS4
  34  = AF41, 36 = AF42, 38 = AF43
  40  = CS5
  46  = EF  (Expedited Forwarding) ← voice / highest user data priority
  48  = CS6
  56  = CS7

5. The Four DSCP Classes — EF, AF, CS, and BE

5.1 EF — Expedited Forwarding (DSCP 46)

EF (Expedited Forwarding), DSCP value 46 (binary 101110), is the highest-priority per-hop behaviour for user traffic. It is defined in RFC 3246 and is used exclusively for traffic that requires minimum delay, minimum jitter, and minimum loss — the characteristics that voice (VoIP RTP) demands.

  EF — key characteristics:
  DSCP value:  46
  Binary:      101110
  IP Prec:     5 (upper 3 bits = 101)
  CoS equiv:   5
  Use:         VoIP RTP audio, real-time interactive voice
  Queueing:    Strict Priority Queue (PQ / LLQ) — sent before all other traffic
  Bandwidth:   Should be limited to ≤33% of link capacity to prevent
               EF traffic from starving all other classes
Voice traffic marking: Cisco IP phones mark their RTP audio stream at DSCP EF (46) and CoS 5 by default. Call signalling (SIP, SCCP) is typically marked CS3 (DSCP 24) — a lower priority than the voice payload itself.

5.2 AF — Assured Forwarding (AF11–AF43)

AF (Assured Forwarding) is defined in RFC 2597 and provides four traffic classes (AF1x through AF4x), each with three drop precedences (low, medium, high). AF gives a traffic class a guaranteed minimum bandwidth allocation and defines how aggressively packets within that class are dropped when congestion occurs.

  AF naming convention: AF [Class] [Drop Precedence]

  Class:          1 = lowest AF priority,  4 = highest AF priority
  Drop Precedence:1 = low drop,  2 = medium drop,  3 = high drop

  ┌─────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  Name   │  DSCP Dec │  DSCP Bin │  Drop Prob  │  Typical Use │
  ├─────────┼───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┼──────────────┤
  │  AF11   │    10     │  001010   │  Low        │  Bulk data   │
  │  AF12   │    12     │  001100   │  Medium     │  Bulk data   │
  │  AF13   │    14     │  001110   │  High       │  Bulk data   │
  ├─────────┼───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┼──────────────┤
  │  AF21   │    18     │  010010   │  Low        │  Data apps   │
  │  AF22   │    20     │  010100   │  Medium     │  Data apps   │
  │  AF23   │    22     │  010110   │  High       │  Data apps   │
  ├─────────┼───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┼──────────────┤
  │  AF31   │    26     │  011010   │  Low        │  Business    │
  │  AF32   │    28     │  011100   │  Medium     │  apps        │
  │  AF33   │    30     │  011110   │  High       │  (CRM, ERP)  │
  ├─────────┼───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┼──────────────┤
  │  AF41   │    34     │  100010   │  Low        │  Video conf  │
  │  AF42   │    36     │  100100   │  Medium     │  Video conf  │
  │  AF43   │    38     │  100110   │  High       │  Video conf  │
  └─────────┴───────────┴───────────┴─────────────┴──────────────┘

  Drop precedence within a class:
  AF_1 (low drop)   → kept longest during congestion
  AF_3 (high drop)  → dropped first during congestion (within the same class)

  WRED (Weighted Random Early Detection) uses drop precedence to
  selectively pre-drop packets before a queue fills completely.
AF formula: DSCP value = 8 × (class) + 2 × (drop precedence)
AF41 = 8×4 + 2×1 = 32 + 2 = 34
AF23 = 8×2 + 2×3 = 16 + 6 = 22
AF13 = 8×1 + 2×3 = 8 + 6 = 14
This formula lets you calculate any AF DSCP value without memorising the full table.

5.3 CS — Class Selector (CS0–CS7)

CS (Class Selector) values (CS0–CS7) are defined in RFC 2474 for backward compatibility with the old IP Precedence 3-bit system. Class Selectors use only the upper 3 bits of the 6-bit DSCP field (the lower 3 bits are always 0), so their decimal values are exact multiples of 8: CS0=0, CS1=8, CS2=16, CS3=24, CS4=32, CS5=40, CS6=48, CS7=56.

CS Name DSCP Dec IP Precedence Equiv. Typical Use
CS7 56 7 — Network Control Reserved for network control (rarely used for data)
CS6 48 6 — Internetwork Control Routing protocols (OSPF, BGP, EIGRP)
CS5 40 5 — Critical Sometimes used for voice signalling or video
CS4 32 4 — Flash Override Video surveillance, real-time video
CS3 24 3 — Flash Call signalling (SIP, SCCP, H.323)
CS2 16 2 — Immediate Network management (SNMP, syslog)
CS1 8 1 — Priority Scavenger / less-than-best-effort (e.g., P2P)
CS0 0 0 — Routine Same as Best Effort (BE) — default for unmarked traffic

5.4 BE — Best Effort (DSCP 0)

BE (Best Effort) is DSCP value 0 — all six bits are zero. It is the default class for all traffic that has not been marked by any QoS policy. Best Effort traffic receives no bandwidth guarantee and no protection from drops. It is served only when higher-priority queues are empty. The vast majority of internet traffic is Best Effort.

6. IP Precedence — The Legacy System

IP Precedence (IPP) is the original 3-bit QoS marking field defined in RFC 791 (1981) as part of the IPv4 ToS byte. It provides 8 values (0–7). IP Precedence is a legacy standard — modern networks use DSCP — but it remains relevant because DSCP was designed to be backward compatible with it, and some older devices still mark or read IP Precedence.

IPP Value Name DSCP CS Equiv. Notes
7 Network Control CS7 (56) Highest — reserved for routing protocols
6 Internetwork Control CS6 (48) Routing protocol updates
5 Critical / EF CS5 (40) / EF (46) Voice; note EF=46 has IPP bits = 5 (101)
4 Flash Override CS4 (32) Video, high-priority data
3 Flash CS3 (24) Call signalling
2 Immediate CS2 (16) Network management
1 Priority CS1 (8) Low-priority / scavenger
0 Routine (Best Effort) CS0 / BE (0) Default — no priority
  Relationship between IP Precedence, CS, and DSCP:

  IP Precedence  CS Name   DSCP Dec   Notes
  ─────────────  ────────  ─────────  ──────────────────────────────
       7          CS7         56      Multiples of 8 — the CS values
       6          CS6         48      map directly to IP Precedence
       5          CS5         40      (DSCP = IPP × 8)
       4          CS4         32
       3          CS3         24
       2          CS2         16
       1          CS1          8
       0          CS0/BE       0

  Additional DSCP values between CS multiples (non-zero lower 3 bits):
  EF = 46 (between CS5=40 and CS6=48) — IPP bits read as 5
  AF41 = 34, AF42 = 36, AF43 = 38 (between CS4=32 and CS5=40)
  AF31 = 26, AF32 = 28, AF33 = 30 (between CS3=24 and CS4=32)

7. DSCP Quick-Reference Table — All Key Values

DSCP Name DSCP Dec DSCP Hex Binary (6 bits) IP Prec CoS Equiv. Typical Traffic
CS7 56 0x38 111000 7 7 Network control
CS6 48 0x30 110000 6 6 Routing protocols
EF 46 0x2E 101110 5 5 VoIP RTP voice
CS5 40 0x28 101000 5 5 Voice signalling (alt)
AF41 34 0x22 100010 4 4 Video conferencing (low drop)
AF42 36 0x24 100100 4 4 Video conferencing (med drop)
AF43 38 0x26 100110 4 4 Video conferencing (high drop)
CS4 32 0x20 100000 4 4 Video surveillance
AF31 26 0x1A 011010 3 3 Business apps (low drop)
AF32 28 0x1C 011100 3 3 Business apps (med drop)
AF33 30 0x1E 011110 3 3 Business apps (high drop)
CS3 24 0x18 011000 3 3 Call signalling (SIP, SCCP)
AF21 18 0x12 010010 2 2 Transactional data (low drop)
AF22 20 0x14 010100 2 2 Transactional data (med drop)
AF23 22 0x16 010110 2 2 Transactional data (high drop)
CS2 16 0x10 010000 2 2 Network management
AF11 10 0x0A 001010 1 1 Bulk data (low drop)
AF12 12 0x0C 001100 1 1 Bulk data (med drop)
AF13 14 0x0E 001110 1 1 Bulk data (high drop)
CS1 8 0x08 001000 1 1 Scavenger / P2P
BE / CS0 0 0x00 000000 0 0 Default / best effort

8. Where Marking Happens — Trust Boundaries

Marking should happen as close to the traffic source as possible — but only where the source is trusted. The point in the network where QoS marks are accepted as valid (or re-marked to enforce policy) is called the trust boundary. Beyond the trust boundary, the network honours the marks. At the trust boundary itself, the network verifies or re-marks.

  Trust boundary placement:

  [IP Phone]──CoS5/EF──►[Access Switch]──CoS5/EF──►[Distribution]──►[WAN Router]
                              ▲
                        Trust boundary
                        (switch trusts IP phone markings
                         because phones are known devices)

  [PC]──CoS0/BE──►[Access Switch]──CoS0/BE──►[Distribution]
         ▲               │
     Untrusted        Re-marks PC traffic
     (PCs can mark    to appropriate DSCP
      their own        based on application
      packets to       (NBAR or ACL)
      any value)

  The access switch is the typical trust boundary for end-user segments:
  → Phones:  trust the marking (CoS 5 / DSCP EF)
  → PCs:     do NOT trust — re-mark or override

Trust Boundary Principles

Device / Location Trust Decision Reason
IP Phone → Access Switch Trust CoS 5 / EF from phone IP phones are managed devices with known, correct markings
PC → Access Switch Do NOT trust PC markings PCs can be configured by users to mark all traffic EF — defeating QoS policy
Access Switch → Distribution Switch Trust — marks applied at access layer are honoured Distribution switch assumes access switches have enforced the trust boundary correctly
Enterprise → ISP WAN link ISP may re-mark or cap DSCP values at ingress ISPs do not trust customer markings — they enforce their own QoS policy (often re-marking to a limited DSCP set)

Cisco Switch Trust Commands

  ! Trust CoS markings arriving on the access port (e.g., from IP phone):
  Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust cos

  ! Trust DSCP markings arriving on the port:
  Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust dscp

  ! Trust IP Precedence:
  Switch(config-if)# mls qos trust ip-precedence

  ! Do not trust (default on access ports — re-mark to DSCP 0):
  Switch(config-if)# no mls qos trust

  ! Enable MQC QoS globally on a Catalyst switch (required first):
  Switch(config)# mls qos
Cisco IP phone auto-trust: When a Cisco IP phone is detected via CDP on a port configured with switchport voice vlan, some Catalyst switches automatically trust the phone's CoS markings without explicit mls qos trust cos configuration. Always verify with show mls qos interface.

9. Marking with Cisco IOS MQC — Configuration

On Cisco routers and Layer 3 switches, QoS marking is configured using the Modular QoS CLI (MQC) framework — the same class-map / policy-map structure used for queuing and policing. Traffic is first classified (identified), then marked with the appropriate DSCP or CoS value.

Example — Marking VoIP and Business Traffic on a WAN Router

  Scenario: An access router must mark traffic from the inside LAN before
  forwarding it across a WAN link. VoIP is marked EF; video is marked AF41;
  business apps are marked AF31; everything else is marked BE.

  ! Step 1 — Classify traffic with ACLs or NBAR:
  ip access-list extended VOIP-ACL
   permit udp any any range 16384 32767
   ! (RTP audio port range — adjust for your deployment)

  ip access-list extended VIDEO-ACL
   permit tcp any any eq 1720
   permit udp any any eq 5004

  ! Step 2 — Class maps to match traffic:
  class-map match-any VOIP-CLASS
   match access-group name VOIP-ACL

  class-map match-any VIDEO-CLASS
   match access-group name VIDEO-ACL

  class-map match-any BUSINESS-CLASS
   match protocol http
   match protocol https
   match protocol citrix

  ! Step 3 — Policy map to mark DSCP:
  policy-map MARK-POLICY
   class VOIP-CLASS
    set dscp ef
   class VIDEO-CLASS
    set dscp af41
   class BUSINESS-CLASS
    set dscp af31
   class class-default
    set dscp default
    ! 'default' = DSCP 0 / BE

  ! Step 4 — Apply policy map to interface (inbound = mark on ingress):
  interface GigabitEthernet0/0
   service-policy input MARK-POLICY

Marking CoS on a Trunk Interface

  ! Set CoS 5 for voice traffic leaving a trunk port:
  policy-map MARK-COS-POLICY
   class VOIP-CLASS
    set cos 5
   class VIDEO-CLASS
    set cos 4
   class class-default
    set cos 0

  interface GigabitEthernet0/1
   switchport mode trunk
   service-policy output MARK-COS-POLICY

Verification Commands

  ! Verify QoS policy is applied to interface:
  Router# show policy-map interface GigabitEthernet0/0

  ! Show class-map configuration:
  Router# show class-map

  ! Show policy-map details:
  Router# show policy-map MARK-POLICY

  ! Check DSCP markings on packets (Wireshark / debug):
  Router# debug ip packet detail
  ! (caution — very verbose on busy interfaces)

  ! On Catalyst switches — verify trust settings:
  Switch# show mls qos interface GigabitEthernet0/1
  Switch# show mls qos interface GigabitEthernet0/1 queueing

See also: QoS Queuing | QoS Policing & Shaping | DSCP Marking Lab | MQC QoS Basics Lab | CBWFQ & LLQ Lab

10. CoS-to-DSCP and DSCP-to-CoS Mapping

When traffic crosses a boundary between a Layer 2 domain (where CoS exists) and a Layer 3 domain (where DSCP exists), the QoS marks must be translated. Cisco switches and routers maintain mapping tables that convert CoS to DSCP (when a tagged frame is routed) and DSCP to CoS (when a routed packet is forwarded onto a trunk link).

Default Cisco CoS-to-DSCP Mapping

CoS Value Default DSCP DSCP Name Notes
0 0 BE Best effort
1 8 CS1 Scavenger / background
2 16 CS2 Network management
3 24 CS3 Call signalling
4 32 CS4 Video
5 46 EF Voice — note: CoS 5 maps to EF (46), not CS5 (40)
6 48 CS6 Routing protocols
7 56 CS7 Network control
Key mapping to memorise: CoS 5 maps to DSCP EF (46), not DSCP CS5 (40). This is by Cisco convention and reflects that both CoS 5 and DSCP EF are the standard markings for VoIP audio. The mapping table can be customised with the mls qos map cos-dscp command on Catalyst switches if the defaults do not fit your design.
  ! View the current CoS-to-DSCP mapping table on a Catalyst switch:
  Switch# show mls qos maps cos-dscp

  CoS-to-DSCP map:
  cos:  0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7
        ↓   ↓   ↓   ↓   ↓   ↓   ↓   ↓
  dscp: 0   8  16  24  32  46  48  56

  ! Customise the mapping (rarely needed — default is industry standard):
  Switch(config)# mls qos map cos-dscp 0 8 16 24 32 46 48 56

See also: QoS Overview | QoS Queuing | QoS Policing & Shaping | VLANs | 802.1Q VLAN Tagging | Voice VLAN | DSCP Marking Lab

Test Your Knowledge — QoS Marking Quiz

1. What DSCP value is used for VoIP RTP audio traffic, and what is the name of this per-hop behaviour?

Correct answer is C. VoIP RTP audio is always marked DSCP 46 — EF (Expedited Forwarding). EF provides the minimum delay, minimum jitter, and minimum loss treatment required for real-time voice. At Layer 2, this corresponds to CoS 5. Call signalling (SIP, SCCP) uses CS3 (DSCP 24), while video conferencing uses AF41 (DSCP 34). See: QoS Overview

2. How many bits does the DSCP field use, and where is it located in an IPv4 packet?

Correct answer is A. DSCP uses the upper 6 bits of the IPv4 ToS byte (bits 7 through 2), formally called the DS (Differentiated Services) field per RFC 2474. The remaining 2 bits (bits 1–0) are used for ECN (Explicit Congestion Notification). The CoS field (3 bits) lives in the 802.1Q Ethernet tag — not in the IP header.

3. What is the DSCP value of AF32, and which drop precedence does it represent within its class?

Correct answer is B. Using the AF formula: DSCP = 8 × (class) + 2 × (drop precedence) = 8×3 + 2×2 = 24 + 4 = 28. AF32 is in forwarding class 3 (business applications) and has medium drop precedence — during congestion it is dropped less aggressively than AF33 but more aggressively than AF31. AF31 = 8×3 + 2×1 = 26, AF32 = 28, AF33 = 30.

4. What is the CoS value used for VoIP audio on an 802.1Q trunk link, and where is this value carried in the frame?

Correct answer is D. VoIP audio uses CoS 5 at Layer 2. The CoS value lives in the 3-bit PCP (Priority Code Point) field within the 4-byte 802.1Q tag. This tag is present only on trunk links (802.1Q-tagged frames). CoS marks are stripped when a frame exits an access port — they are a Layer 2 mechanism only. See: 802.1Q VLAN Tagging

5. What is the purpose of the trust boundary in a QoS deployment?

Correct answer is B. The trust boundary is a critical QoS design decision. If you trust too far out (e.g., trusting PCs), users can mark their own traffic at the highest priority, defeating QoS. If you trust too far in, you lose the ability to apply policy where traffic enters the network. The access layer switch is typically the trust boundary for end-user devices — trusting managed IP phones but overriding markings from PCs.

6. Why are Class Selector (CS) DSCP values always multiples of 8?

Correct answer is C. CS values are designed for backward compatibility with the legacy IP Precedence 3-bit system. A CS value sets only the upper 3 bits of the 6-bit DSCP field and leaves the lower 3 bits as zero. Since the lower 3 bits are worth 4+2+1 = 7, setting them to zero means CS values increase in steps of 8 (2³ = 8). A device that only reads IP Precedence will correctly interpret a CS-marked packet because the upper 3 bits match.

7. A Cisco Catalyst switch access port connects to an IP phone. Which command correctly configures the switch to trust the phone's QoS markings?

Correct answer is A. On Cisco Catalyst switches, mls qos trust cos configured under the interface tells the switch to accept and honour the CoS value in the 802.1Q tag sent by the connected device. For IP phones, this means the CoS 5 mark for voice RTP is preserved as the frame crosses the switch fabric. Note that mls qos must also be enabled globally. See: Voice VLAN

8. What is the default DSCP value for traffic that has not been marked by any QoS policy, and how is it treated?

Correct answer is D. Unmarked traffic defaults to DSCP 0, also called BE (Best Effort) or CS0. Best Effort traffic receives no QoS guarantees — no minimum bandwidth, no jitter control, and no drop protection. It is served only when bandwidth is available after higher-priority classes have been serviced. The vast majority of internet traffic is Best Effort.

9. An engineer uses the formula DSCP = 8 × class + 2 × drop precedence to calculate AF values. What is the DSCP value of AF43?

Correct answer is B. AF43 = class 4, drop precedence 3.
DSCP = 8 × 4 + 2 × 3 = 32 + 6 = 38.
For comparison: AF41 = 32+2 = 34, AF42 = 32+4 = 36, AF43 = 32+6 = 38. AF43 has the highest drop probability within class 4 — during congestion it will be dropped before AF42 and AF41 packets of the same class. See: DSCP Lab

10. Which Cisco IOS MQC command applies a QoS marking policy to an interface to mark incoming traffic before it is forwarded?

Correct answer is C. In Cisco IOS MQC, after creating class maps and policy maps, the policy is attached to an interface using service-policy input MARK-POLICY (to mark traffic as it arrives) or service-policy output MARK-POLICY (to mark as it departs). Marking is most effective on ingress (input) — closest to the traffic source — so all downstream devices can act on the mark. See: MQC QoS Basics Lab

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