Policing And Marking - Cisco Catalyst 3750-X Software Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for Catalyst 3750-X:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 39
Configuring QoS
Understanding QoS
To enable the policy map, you attach it to a port by using the service-policy interface configuration
command.
You can apply a nonhierarchical policy map to a physical port or an SVI. However, a hierarchical policy
map can only be applied to an SVI. A hierarchical policy map contains two levels. The first level, the
VLAN level, specifies the actions to be taken against a traffic flow on the SVI. The second level, the
interface level, specifies the actions to be taken against the traffic on the physical ports that belong to the
SVI. The interface-level actions are specified in the interface-level policy map.
For more information, see the
"Policing and Marking" section on page
39-9. For configuration
information, see the
"Configuring a QoS Policy" section on page
39-46.

Policing and Marking

After a packet is classified and has a DSCP-based or CoS-based QoS label assigned to it, the policing
and marking process can begin as shown in
Figure
39-4.
Policing involves creating a policer that specifies the bandwidth limits for the traffic. Packets that exceed
the limits are out of profile or nonconforming. Each policer decides on a packet-by-packet basis whether
the packet is in or out of profile and specifies the actions on the packet. These actions, carried out by the
marker, include passing through the packet without modification, dropping the packet, or modifying
(marking down) the assigned DSCP of the packet and allowing the packet to pass through. The
configurable policed-DSCP map provides the packet with a new DSCP-based QoS label. For information
on the policed-DSCP map, see the
"Mapping Tables" section on page
39-13. Marked-down packets use
the same queues as the original QoS label to prevent packets in a flow from getting out of order.
All traffic, regardless of whether it is bridged or routed, is subjected to a policer, if one is configured.
Note
As a result, bridged packets might be dropped or might have their DSCP or CoS fields modified when
they are policed and marked.
You can configure policing on a physical port or an SVI. For more information about configuring
policing on physical ports, see the
"Policing on Physical Ports" section on page
39-10. When
configuring policy maps on an SVI, you can create a hierarchical policy map and can define an individual
policer only in the secondary interface-level policy map. For more information, see the
"Policing on
SVIs" section on page
39-11.
After you configure the policy map and policing actions, attach the policy to an ingress port or SVI by
using the service-policy interface configuration command. For configuration information, see the
"Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps" section on
page
39-56, the
"Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on SVIs by Using Hierarchical Policy
Maps" section on page
39-60, and the
"Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic by Using Aggregate
Policers" section on page
39-67.
Catalyst 3750-X and 3560-X Switch Software Configuration Guide
39-9
OL-21521-01

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Catalyst 3560-x

Table of Contents