10 policy-map rename, 5 diffserv service commands, 1 service-policy – Kontron AT8402 CLI User Manual
Page 127: 10 policy-map rename - 15, 5 diffserv service commands - 15, Service-policy - 15, At8402 quality of service (qos) commands
AT8402
Quality of Service (QoS) Commands
Page 3 - 15
AT8402 CLI Reference Manual
NOTE: The CLI mode is changed to Policy-Map Config when this command
is successfully executed.
Format
policy-map
<policyname>
in
Mode
Global Config
3.4.9.1
no policy-map
This command eliminates an existing DiffServ policy. The
<policyname>
parameter is
the name of an existing DiffServ policy. This command may be issued at any time. If
the policy is currently referenced by one or more interface service attachments, this
delete attempt fails.
Format
no policy-map
<policyname>
Mode
Global Config
3.4.10
policy-map rename
This command changes the name of a DiffServ policy. The
<policyname> i
s the name
of an existing DiffServ class. The
<newpolicyname>
parameter is a case-sensitive
alphanumeric string from 1 to 31 characters uniquely identifying the policy.
Format
policy-map rename
<policyname> <newpolicyname>
Mode
Global Config
3.5
DiffServ Service Commands
Use the DiffServ service commands to assign a DiffServ traffic conditioning policy,
which you specified by using the policy commands, to an interface in the incoming
direction
The service commands attach a defined policy to a directional interface. You can
assign only one policy at any one time to an interface in the inbound direction.
DiffServ is not used in the outbound direction.
This set of commands consists of service addition/removal.
The CLI command root is
service-policy
.
3.5.1
service-policy
This command attaches a policy to an interface in the inbound direction. The
<policyname>
parameter is the name of an existing DiffServ policy. This command
causes a service to create a reference to the policy.
NOTE: This command effectively enables DiffServ on an interface in the
inbound direction. There is no separate interface administrative 'mode'
command for DiffServ.
NOTE: This command fails if any attributes within the policy definition
exceed the capabilities of the interface. Once a policy is successfully
attached to an interface, any attempt to change the policy definition,
that would result in a violation of the interface capabilities, causes the
policy change attempt to fail.