Configuring Qos; Classifying Traffic By Using Class Maps - Cisco ONS 15454 Software Feature And Configuration Manual

Sonet / sdh ml-series multilayer ethernet card
Hide thumbs Also See for ONS 15454:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Configuring QoS

The QoS bandwidth allocation of Multicast and Broadcast traffic is handled separately and differently
than Unicast traffic. Aggregate Multicast and Broadcast traffic are given a fixed bandwidth commit of
10% on each interface, and treated as best effort for traffic exceeding 10%. Multicast and Broadcast are
supported at line-rate.
Configuring QoS
Configuring a QoS policy typically requires classifying traffic into classes, configuring policies applied
to those traffic classes, and attaching policies to interfaces.
This section contains this configuration information:

Classifying Traffic by Using Class Maps

You use the class-map global configuration command to isolate a specific traffic flow (or class) from all
other traffic and to name it. The class map defines the criteria to use to match against a specific traffic
flow to further classify the traffic of an interface. Match statements can include bridge-group,
input-interface, IP precedence values, CoS, or IP DSCP values criterion. In use, the traffic class applies
only to a specific interface on which it is applied (via a policy map). The traffic classification is not
global, but the traffic class definition can be re-used for multiple interfaces or policy maps.
A single hidden class map always exists, named class-default, which is defined as match-any. This can
be used to match all packets on any input or output that has an applied policy map.
Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create a class map and to define the match
criterion to classify traffic:
Command
Step 1
Router# configure terminal
Step 2
Router(config)# class-map
}]
match any
class-map-name
Cisco ONS 15454 SONET/SDH ML-Series Multilayer Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide, R4.0
13-2
Classifying Traffic by Using Class Maps, page 13-2
Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic by Using Policy Maps, page 13-3
Applying Policy Map to Interface, page 13-6
[{
|
match-all
Purpose
Enters global configuration mode.
Creates a class map, and enters class-map configuration mode.
Use the match-all keyword to perform a logical-AND of all
matching statements under this class map. All match criteria in the
class map must be matched.
Use the match-any keyword to perform a logical-OR of all
matching statements under this class map. One or more match
criteria must be matched.
For class-map-name, specify the name of the class map.
If neither the match-all nor match-any keyword is specified, the
default is match-all.
Chapter 13
Configuring Quality of Service
78-15224-02

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents