Configuring A Mac Class Map - Cisco WAP131 Administration Manual

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Quality of Service
Class Map
STEP 5
NOTE
STEP 1
STEP 2
Cisco WAP131 and WAP351 Administration Guide
Destination Port—Includes a destination port in the match condition for the
rule. The destination port is identified in the datagram header.
-
Select From List—Matches the destination port in the datagram header
with the selected keyword: ftp, ftpdata, http, smtp, snmp, telnet, tftp,
www. Each of these keywords translates into its equivalent port number.
-
Match to Port—Matches the destination port in the datagram header
with an IANA port number that you specify. The port range is from 0 to
65535 and includes three different types of ports:
0 to 1023—Well Known Ports
1024 to 49151—Registered Ports
49152 to 65535—Dynamic and/or Private Ports
-
Mask—The port mask. The mask determines which bits are used and
which bits are ignored. Only the hexadecimal digit (0 to 0xFFFF) is
allowed. 1 means the bit matters and 0 means that we should ignore this
bit.
IPv6 Flow Label—Enter a 20-bit number that is unique to an IPv6 packet. It
is used by end stations to signify QoS handling in routers (range 0 to
1048575).
IP DSCP—Uses the DSCP value as a match criterion.
-
Select from List—Choose the DSCP type from the list.
-
Match to Value—Enter a custom DSCP value from 0 to 63.
Click Save. The changes are saved to the Startup Configuration.
To delete a class map, choose it in the Class Map Name list and click Delete. The
class map cannot be deleted if it is already attached to a policy.

Configuring a MAC Class Map

To add and configure a MAC class map:
Select Quality of Service > Class Map.
In the Class Map Name field, enter the name for the new class map. The name can
contain from 1 to 31 alphanumeric and special characters. Spaces are not
allowed.
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