...also ich habe gefunden sowohl layer 2 als auch layer 3 je nach acl
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/...0802a0a1c.html
aus o.g. dokument
Queues
Beginning with Cisco IOS Release 12.2(11)JA, Cisco Aironet APs support EDCF-type QoS, with up to eight queues for downstream (toward the 802.11b clients) QoS. These queues can be allocated in any of the following ways:
•Based on ToS or DSCP settings of the packets
•Based on Layer 2 or Layer 3 access lists
•Based on VLAN
•Based on dynamic registration of devices such as the Cisco 7920 Wireless IP Phone
Although eight queues are supported on the AP, Cisco recommend that you have only two queues for traffic on the AP to ensure the best possible voice QoS. Voice (RTP) and signaling (SCCP) traffic should be placed into the highest priority queue, and all data traffic should be placed into a best-effort queue. While 802.11b EDCF does not guarantee that voice traffic will be protected from data traffic, using this queuing model should provide the best statistical results for voice QoS.
The Cisco 7920 phones support EDCF-type QoS for upstream (toward the AP) traffic. In addition, the Cisco 7920 phone dynamically announces its presence to the Cisco Aironet AP to ensure that its downstream traffic is placed into the high-priority queue on the AP. This dynamic announcement is done via Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP). The CDP packets are sent from the Cisco 7920 phone to the AP, and they identify the phone so that the AP can place all traffic to the phone in the high-priority queue.
scheint auch so, dass das ein IP Telefon (hier7920) qos auch schon kann...
aber wie gesagt, ich hab sonst nicht so viel mit ip telefonie am hut...
könnte mir aber vorstellen, dass du bestimmte mac adressen in ein vlan reinwirfst und sagst, dies ist die high priority queue (also deine ip telefone)