Class-map – Brocade 6910 Ethernet Access Switch Configuration Guide (Supporting R2.2.0.0) User Manual

Page 484

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Brocade 6910 Ethernet Access Switch Configuration Guide

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22

Quality of Service Commands

To create a service policy for a specific category of ingress traffic, follow these steps:

1. Use the

class-map

command to designate a class name for a specific category of traffic, and

enter the Class Map configuration mode.

2. Use the

match

command to select a specific type of traffic based on an access list, a CoS

value, a DSCP or IP Precedence value, a source port, or a VLAN.

3. Use the

policy-map

command to designate a policy name for a specific manner in which

ingress traffic will be handled, and enter the Policy Map configuration mode.

4. Use the

class

command to identify the class map, and enter Policy Map Class configuration

mode. A policy map can contain up to 16 class maps.

5. Use the

set phb

,

set cos

, or

set ip dscp

command to modify the per-hop behavior, the class of

service value in the VLAN tag, or the priority bits in the IP header (IP DSCP value) for the
matching traffic class, and use one of the police commands to monitor parameters such as the
average flow and burst rate, and drop any traffic that exceeds the specified rate, or just reduce
the DSCP service level for traffic exceeding the specified rate.

6. Use the

service-policy

command to assign a policy map to a specific interface.

NOTE

Create a Class Map before creating a Policy Map.

class-map

This command creates a class map used for matching packets to the specified class, and enters
Class Map configuration mode. Use the no form to delete a class map.

Syntax

[no] class-map class-map-name [match-all | match-any]

class-map-name - Name of the class map. (Range: 1-32 characters)

match-all - Match all conditions within a class map.

match-any - Match any condition within a class map.

Default Setting
None

Command Mode
Global Configuration

Command Usage

First enter this command to designate a class map and enter the Class Map configuration
mode. Then use

match

commands to specify the criteria for ingress traffic that will be

classified under this class map.

One or more class maps can be assigned to a policy map (see

“policy-map”

on page 431). The

policy map is then bound by a service policy to an interface (see

“service-policy”

on page 440).

A service policy defines packet classification, service tagging, and bandwidth policing. Once a
policy map has been bound to an interface, no additional class maps may be added to the
policy map, nor any changes made to the assigned class maps with the

match

or set

commands.

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