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Policing And Marking - Cisco Catalyst 4500 Series Configuration Manual

Release ios xe 3.3.0sg and ios 15.1(1)sg
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Overview of QoS
You create and name a policy map by using the policy-map global configuration command. When you
enter this command, the switch enters the policy-map configuration mode. In this mode, you specify the
actions to take on a specific traffic class by using the set, police, bandwidth, or shape policy-map
configuration and policy-map class configuration commands. To make the policy map effective, you
attach it to an interface by using the service-policy interface configuration command.
The policy map can also contain commands that define the policer, (the bandwidth limitations of the
traffic) and the action to take if the limits are exceeded. For more information, see the
Marking" section on page
A policy map also has these characteristics:

Policing and Marking

Policing involves creating a policer that specifies the bandwidth limits for the traffic. Packets that exceed
the limits are out of profile or nonconforming. Each policer specifies the action to take for packets that
are in or out of profile. These actions, carried out by the marker, include passing through the packet
without modification, dropping the packet, or marking down the packet with a new DSCP value that is
obtained from the configurable policed-DSCP map. You can configure policer within a policy map with
the police command in policy-map class configuration mode. For information on the policed-DSCP map,
see the
When configuring policing and policers, keep these items in mind:
Queueing and Scheduling
The Catalyst 4500 Series Switch supports 8 transmit queues per port. Once the decision has been made
to forward a packet out a port, the output QoS classification determines the transmit queue into which
the packet must be enqueued.
Queues are assigned when an output policy attached to a port with one or more queuing related actions
for one or more classes of traffic. Because there are only eight queues per port, there are at most eight
traffic classes (including class-default, the reserved class) with queuing action(s). Classes of traffic that
do not have any queuing action are referred to as non-queuing classes. Non-queuing class traffic use the
queue corresponding to class-default.
Software Configuration Guide—Release IOS XE 3.3.0SG and IOS 15.1(1)SG
40-8
40-8.
A policy map can contain up to 254 class statements.
You can have different classes within a policy map.
"Queueing and Scheduling" section on page
Policers account only for the Layer 2 header length when calculating policer rates. In contrast,
shapers account for header length as well as IPG in rate calculations.
Beginning with Cisco IOS Release 15.0(2)SG (IOS XE 3.2.0), Supervisor Engine 6-E, Supervisor
Engine 6L-E, Catalyst 4900M, Catalyst 4948E, Supervisor Engine 7-E, and Supervisor Engine 7L-E
support the qos account layer-all encapsulation command, which accounts for Layer 1 headers of
20 bytes (12 bytes preamble + 8 bytes IPG) and Layer 2 headers in policing features.
Only the average rate and committed burst parameters are configurable.
After you configure the policy map and policing actions, attach the policy to an ingress or egress
interface by using the service-policy interface configuration command.
For 2 rate 3 colors (2r3c) policers, if no explicit violation-action is specified, the exceed-action is
used as the violate-action.
Chapter 40
Configuring Quality of Service
40-8.
"Policing and
OL-25340-01

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