Diffserv Class Commands - NETGEAR M6100 Series Reference Manual

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definitions for all derived classes, otherwise the switch rejects the change. You can remove a
class reference from a class definition.
The only way to remove an individual match criterion from an existing class definition is to
delete the class and re-create it.
Note:
The mark possibilities for policing include CoS, IP DSCP, and IP
Precedence. While the latter two are only meaningful for IP packet
types, CoS marking is allowed for both IP and non-IP packets, since it
updates the 802.1p user priority field contained in the VLAN tag of the
layer 2 packet header.
diffserv
This command sets the DiffServ operational mode to active. While disabled, the DiffServ
configuration is retained and can be changed, but it is not activated. When enabled, DiffServ
services are activated.
Format
diffserv
Mode
Global Config
no diffserv
This command sets the DiffServ operational mode to inactive. While disabled, the DiffServ
configuration is retained and can be changed, but it is not activated. When enabled, DiffServ
services are activated.
Format
no diffserv
Mode
Global Config

DiffServ Class Commands

Use the DiffServ class commands to define traffic classification. To classify traffic, you specify
Behavior Aggregate (BA), based on DSCP and Multi-Field (MF) classes of traffic (name,
match criteria)
This set of commands consists of class creation/deletion and matching, with the class match
commands specifying Layer 3, Layer 2, and general match criteria. The class match criteria
are also known as class rules, with a class definition consisting of one or more rules to
identify the traffic that belongs to the class.
M6100 Series Switches
Quality of Service Commands
1004

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