Classifying, Policing, And Marking Traffic On Physical Ports By Using Policy Maps - Cisco Catalyst 2975 Software Configuration Manual

Ios release 12.2(55)se
Hide thumbs Also See for Catalyst 2975:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Configuring Standard QoS

Classifying, Policing, and Marking Traffic on Physical Ports by Using Policy Maps

You can configure a policy map on a physical port that specifies which traffic class to act on. Actions
can include trusting the CoS, DSCP, or IP precedence values in the traffic class; setting a specific DSCP
or IP precedence value in the traffic class; and specifying the traffic bandwidth limitations for each
matched traffic class (policer) and the action to take when the traffic is out of profile (marking).
A policy map also has these characteristics:
Follow these guidelines when configuring policy maps on physical ports:
Catalyst 2975 Switch Software Configuration Guide
33-50
A policy map can contain multiple class statements, each with different match criteria and policers.
A policy map can contain a predefined default traffic class explicitly placed at the end of the map.
A separate policy-map class can exist for each type of traffic received through a port.
A policy-map trust state and a port trust state are mutually exclusive, and whichever is configured
last takes affect.
You can attach only one policy map per ingress port.
If you configure the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map by using the mls qos map ip-prec-dscp
dscp1...dscp8 global configuration command, the settings only affect packets on ingress interfaces
that are configured to trust the IP precedence value. In a policy map, if you set the packet IP
precedence value to a new value by using the set ip precedence new-precedence policy-map class
configuration command, the egress DSCP value is not affected by the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.
If you want the egress DSCP value to be different than the ingress value, use the set dscp new-dscp
policy-map class configuration command.
If you enter or have used the set ip dscp command, the switch changes this command to set dscp in
its configuration.
You can use the set ip precedence or the set precedence policy-map class configuration command
to change the packet IP precedence value. This setting appears as set ip precedence in the switch
configuration.
A policy-map and a port trust state can both run on a physical interface. The policy-map is applied
before the port trust state.
When you configure a default traffic class by using the class class-default policy-map configuration
command, unclassified traffic (traffic that does not meet the match criteria specified in the traffic
classes) is treated as the default traffic class (class-default).
Chapter 33
Configuring QoS
OL-19720-02

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents