Where To Go From Here - HP 3500 Series Advanced Traffic Management Manual

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Classifier-Based Software Configuration
Traffic Classes
HP Switch(vlan-111)# show statistics policy TCP_UDP vlan 111 in
HitCounts for Policy TCP_UDP
Total
100 class ipv4 TCP action
(
0 )
(
0 )
(
0 )
110 class ipv4 voice action
(
0 )
Figure 8-14. Example of the Statistical Output for a Policy with Active Redirects
8-38
10 match tcp 10.0.8.1 0.0.0.255 15.29.16.104 0.0.0.255 eq 80
20 match tcp 10.0.8.1 0.0.0.255 15.29.16.104 0.0.0.255 eq 22
30 match tcp 10.0.8.1 0.0.0.255 15.29.16.104 0.0.0.255 eq 23
10 match tcp 10.0.8.1 0.0.0.255 15.29.16.104 0.0.0.255 eq 80

Where to Go From Here

Classifier-based service policies are designed to work with your existing
globally-configured software settings. While existing software features allow
you to globally manage all network traffic on a switch or port, classifier-based
service policies allow you to zoom in on subsets of network traffic to further
manage it on a per-port or per-VLAN basis.
You can use the match criteria described in this chapter across software
features to configure classes of traffic for use in feature-specific service
policies.
After you decide on the IPv4 and IPv6 network traffic you want to manage,
refer to the following chapters for more information about how to configure
and use classifier-based quality-of-service and mirroring policies:
Quality of Service (QoS) chapter in the Advanced Configuration Guide
"Traffic Mirroring" section in the Monitoring and Analyzing Switch
Operation appendix in the Management and Configuration Guide

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