Not exactly ![]()
Here’s the output from one router (RB1100AHx2) with /queue interface export:
/queue interface
set ether6 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether12 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether13 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether1 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether2 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether3 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether4 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether5 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether7 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether8 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether9 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether10 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether11 queue=only-hardware-queue
The same order with /interface ethernet, /ip neighbor discovery
Another RB1100AHx2:
/queue interface
set ether12 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether13 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether1 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether2 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether3 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether4 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether5 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether6 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether7 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether8 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether9 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether10 queue=only-hardware-queue
set ether11 queue=only-hardware-queue
So no, it’s not sorted ![]()