Policing Traffic At Two Levels Of Hierarchy - Cisco ASR 9000 Series Service Configuration Manual

Aggregation services router modular quality
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Configuring Hierarchical Modular QoS on Cisco ASR 9000 Series Routers
Command or Action
Step 9
service-policy policy-map-name
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)#
service-policy Bottom-Child
Step 10
end
or
commit
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# end
or
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)#
commit

Policing Traffic at Two Levels of Hierarchy

Use this procedure to configure a hierarchical policing policy to police the traffic that enters or exits he
router on a specific interface.
SUMMARY STEPS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
OL-23108-02
configure
policy-map policy-name
class class-name
(Optional) police rate {value [units] | percent percentage} [burst burst-size [burst-units]]
[peak-rate value [units]] [peak-burst peak-burst [burst-units]]
exit
policy-map policy-name
class class-default
Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router Modular Quality of Service Configuration Guide
How to Configure Hierarchical QoS
Purpose
Applies a bottom-level policy to the top-level
class-default class.
Saves configuration changes.
When you issue the end command, the system
prompts you to commit changes:
Uncommitted changes found, commit them
before exiting (yes/no/cancel)?
[cancel]:
Entering yes saves configuration changes
to the running configuration file, exits the
configuration session, and returns the
router to EXEC mode.
Entering no exits the configuration
session and returns the router to EXEC
mode without committing the
configuration changes.
Entering cancel leaves the router in the
current configuration session without
exiting or committing the configuration
changes.
Use the commit command to save the
configuration changes to the running
configuration file and remain within the
configuration session.
QC-137

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