Cisco ASA 5505 User Manual

Page 654

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32-16

Cisco ASA 5500 Series Configuration Guide using the CLI

Chapter 32 Configuring a Service Policy Using the Modular Policy Framework

Defining Actions (Layer 3/4 Policy Map)

Detailed Steps

Examples

The following is an example of a policy-map command for connection policy. It limits the number of
connections allowed to the web server 10.1.1.1:

hostname(config)# access-list http-server permit tcp any host 10.1.1.1

hostname(config)# class-map http-server

hostname(config-cmap)# match access-list http-server

hostname(config)# policy-map global-policy

hostname(config-pmap)# description This policy map defines a policy concerning connection

to http server.

hostname(config-pmap)# class http-server

hostname(config-pmap-c)# set connection conn-max 256

The following example shows how multi-match works in a policy map:

hostname(config)# class-map inspection_default

hostname(config-cmap)# match default-inspection-traffic

hostname(config)# class-map http_traffic

hostname(config-cmap)# match port tcp eq 80

hostname(config)# policy-map outside_policy

hostname(config-pmap)# class inspection_default

hostname(config-pmap-c)# inspect http http_map

hostname(config-pmap-c)# inspect sip

hostname(config-pmap)# class http_traffic

hostname(config-pmap-c)# set connection timeout idle 0:10:0

Command

Purpose

Step 1

policy-map

policy_map_name

Example:

hostname(config)# policy-map global_policy

Adds the policy map. The policy_map_name argument is the
name of the policy map up to 40 characters in length. All types of
policy maps use the same name space, so you cannot reuse a name
already used by another type of policy map. The CLI enters
policy-map configuration mode.

Step 2

(Optional)

class

class_map_name

Example:

hostname(config-pmap)# description global

policy map

Specifies a previously configured Layer 3/4 class map, where the
class_map_name is the name of the class map. See the

“Identifying Traffic (Layer 3/4 Class Maps)” section on
page 32-12

to add a class map.

Note

If there is no match default-inspection-traffic command
in a class map, then at most one inspect command is
allowed to be configured under the class.

For QoS, you can configure a hierarchical policy map for
the traffic shaping and priority queue features. See the

“Task Flow for Configuring Hierarchical Policy Maps for
QoS Traffic Shaping” section on page 32-11

for more

information.

Step 3

Specify one or more actions for this class map.

See the

“Supported Features for Through Traffic” section on

page 32-2

.

Step 4

Repeat

Step 2

and

Step 3

for each class map you

want to include in this policy map.

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