Quality of Service Commands on the Cisco IOS XR Software
This module lists quality of service (QoS) commands in alphabetical order. For detailed information about QoS concepts, configuration tasks, and examples, see the
Cisco IOS XR
Modular Quality of Service Configuration Guide for the Cisco XR 12000 Series Router.
To specify the minimum bandwidth allocated to a class belonging to a policy map, use the
bandwidth command in policy map class configuration
mode. To remove the bandwidth specified for a class, use the no form of this
command.
Minimum bandwidth, in the units specified, to be assigned to the class.
Range is from 1 to 4294967295. For 16
kbps granularity on 2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3) line cards,
the maximum value is 1.05 gbps.
units
Specifies the units for the bandwidth. Values can be:
bps—bits per second
gbps—gigabits per
second
kbps—kilobits per second
(default)
mbps—megabits per
second
percent percentage-value
Specifies the amount of guaranteed bandwidth, based on an absolute
percentage of available bandwidth. Range is from 1 to 100.
Command Default
The default units is kbps.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
The ability to select the units for the bandwidth was added.
The range of bandwidth values was changed from 8 to 4000000 to 1 to
4294967295.
Release 3.3.1
Minimum rate value changed from 128 kbps to 256 kbps.
Release 3.9.0
The granularity of the rates specified was changed to 8 kbps.
Usage Guidelines
You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The bandwidth command is used to specify the minimum
guaranteed bandwidth allocated for traffic matching a particular class. Bandwidth may be
defined as a specific value or may be set as a percentage of the interface bandwidth.
The actual bandwidth used is calculated in multiples of
8 kbps, the minimum bandwidth rate. The configured value is rounded down to a multiple
of 8 kbps.
Line card Type
Ingress Granularity
Egress Granularity
2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3)**Exceptions: 1-Port OC-48c POS ISE
4-Port OC-12c POS ISE
16 kbps64 kbps64 kbps
16 kbps64 kbps64 kbps
10 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 5)
32 kbps
32 kbps
Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+)
32 kbps
8 kbps
If a percentage value is set, the accuracy that can be expected is 1 percent.
The bandwidth
command can be used only within egress service policies. Use within an ingress policy is
not supported.
Note
The bandwidth value takes into account the Layer 2 encapsulation that is applied to
traffic leaving the interface. For
POS/SDH transmission, the
encapsulation is considered to be 4
bytes. For Ethernet, the encapsulation is 14 bytes; whereas for IEEE 802.1Q,
the encapsulation is 18 bytes. The actual bandwidth assigned to a class can be seen
in the output of the show qos interface command.
Be careful when specifying bandwidth guarantees close to 100 percent, because the
Layer 2 encapsulation considered does not include the entire Layer 2 header. This can
lead to oversubscription, particularly in the case of small packet sizes.
For bundled interfaces,
bandwidth can be configured only as a percentage.
A policy map can have a single bandwidth statement per class. Both percentage and actual
value bandwidth configurations can be used within a policy map.
The bandwidth command does not specify how the bandwidth is to
be shared. Instead it specifies how much bandwidth is guaranteed per class, by setting
the number of tokens that are assigned to the token bucket of a particular class. For
configured behavior to work correctly, you must ensure that the sum of the bandwidths
plus any priority traffic is not greater than the bandwidth of the interface itself. If
the interface is oversubscribed, unpredictable behavior results.
The bandwidth of the interface is set to be that of the physical interface, unless a
hierarchical policy is defined that reduces the bandwidth available to the traffic. The
following example shows a hierarchical policy being used to shape traffic to the
specified value. The child policy then determines how the shaped bandwidth should be
apportioned between the specified classes:
policy-map parent
class match_all
shape average 1000000
bandwidth 1000000
service-policy child
policy-map child
class gold
bandwidth percent 20
class silver
bandwidth percent 40
class default
bandwidth percent 40
Note
The bandwidth command is part of the parent policy. In this
instance, the bandwidth command not only sets the minimum
bandwidth for the class but also resets the reference point for the
bandwidth percent statements in the child policy.
For main interface service policies:
If bandwidth is configured in the parent
class, parent minimum bandwidth is used as a reference for the child bandwidth
percentages.
If bandwidth is not configured in the
parent class, the implicit minimum bandwidth, which is a portion of the total
unallocated bandwidth allocated to the class based on the explicit or implicit
bandwidth remaining, is used as a reference.Implicit bandwidth remaining is an
equal share of unallocated bandwidth among all queuing classes without either
bandwidth or bandwidth remaining actions.
For subinterface policies:
If bandwidth is configured in the parent
class, parent minimum bandwidth is used as a reference for child bandwidth
percentages.
If bandwidth remaining is configured in the
parent class, bandwidth-remaining-percent * interface-rate is used as a
reference.
If bandwidth is not configured in the
parent class, shape rate is used as a reference.
In the following example, the hierarchical policy is attached to the main interface, and
the parent classes are a mix of bandwidth and shape only classes:
policy-map hqos
class c1
bandwidth percent 40
service-policy child
class c2
shape average 500000000
service-policy child
The reference for the child policy in class c2 is the implicit bandwidth of class c2
bounded by the shape rate of class c2. Therefore, the reference = (60 percent *
interface bandwidth) / 3 bounded by 500000000 kbps.
In the following example, the hierarchical policy is a class-default only parent shape
configured on subinterfaces:
policy-map sub_int_hqos
class c1ass-default
shape average 40
service-policy child
The class-default parent shape rate is used as reference.
When the percent keyword is used with the
bandwidth command, the bandwidth of the interface is
defined as being the Layer 2 capacity excluding the Gigabit Ethernet or POS
encapsulation but including the High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC) flags, frame check
sequence (FCS), and so on. These have to be included because they are applied per
packet, and the system cannot predict how many packets of a particular packet size are
being sent out.
For example, the following policy is applied to an OC-192 interface:
policy-map oc-192
class c1
bandwidth percent 50
The resulting bandwidth reservation for class c1 is 4,792,320 kbps. This equates to 50
percent of the OC-192 bandwidth excluding the GE or POS overhead.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to guarantee 50 percent of the interface bandwidth to a
class called class1 and 10 percent of the interface bandwidth to a class called
class2:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# bandwidth percent 50RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class2RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# bandwidth percent 10
Displays QoS information for a specific interface.
bandwidth remaining
To specify how to allocate leftover bandwidth to various classes, use the
bandwidth remaining command in policy map class
configuration mode. To return to the system defaults, use the no form of this
command.
bandwidthremainingpercentpercentage-value
nobandwidthremainingpercentpercentage-value
Syntax Description
percent percentage-value
Specifies the amount of guaranteed bandwidth, based on an absolute
percentage of the available bandwidth. Range is from 1 to 100.
Command Default
No bandwidth is specified.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The bandwidth remaining command is used to set the Modified
Deficit Round Robin (MDRR) weight for the particular class.
When applied within an egress service policy, the command is used to define how any
unallocated bandwidth should be apportioned. It typically is used in conjunction
with the bandwidth command.
In such
a combination, if the minimum bandwidth guarantees are met, the remaining bandwidth is
shared in the ratio defined by the bandwidth remaining command
in the class configuration in the policy map.
The available bandwidth is equally distributed among those queueing classes that do not
have the remaining bandwidth explicitly configured.
Note
On egress, the actual bandwidth of the interface is determined to be the Layer 2
capacity excluding the Layer 2
encapsulation, but including the HDLC flags, FCS, and so on. These have to be included
because they are applied per packet, and the system cannot predict how many packets
of a particular packet size are being sent out.
On egress, if the
bandwidth remaining command is not present, then the
bandwidth is shared equally among the configured queueing classes present in the
policy-map. When attempting precise calculations of expected MDRR behavior, you must
bear in mind that because you are dealing with the bandwidth remaining on the link, you
must convert the values to the bandwidth remaining percentages on the link, based upon
the packet sizes of the traffic within the class. If the packet sizes are the same in
all the classes, then the defined ratio is enforced precisely and predictably on the
link.
The bandwidth remaining
command is not supported on ingress.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
In the following example, a class called
class1 is guaranteed 50 percent of the interface bandwidth and a class called class2 is
guaranteed 10 percent of the interface bandwidth. The remaining bandwidth of 40 percent
is shared by classes class1 and class2 in a 20:80 ratio: class class1 receives 20
percent of the 40 percent, and class class2 receives 80 percent of the 40 percent.
To prevent the parent policer from dropping any ingress traffic that conforms to the
maximum rate specified in the child policer, use the
child-conform-aware command in policy map police
configuration mode. To remove this action from the policy map, use the no form of
this command.
child-conform-aware
nochild-conform-aware
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Command Default
The child-conform-aware command is not configured.
Command Modes
Policy map police configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
In hierarchical policing, traffic is policed first at the child policer level and then
at the parent policer level. It is possible for traffic that conforms to the maximum
rate specified by the child policer to be dropped by the parent policer.
In enhanced hierarchical ingress policing, the
child-conform-aware command prevents the parent policer
from dropping any ingress traffic that conforms to the maximum rate specified in the
child policer.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
This example shows parent and child policy maps in which two classes are defined in the
child policy. In class AF1, the exceed action is set to an action other than to drop
traffic.
If the child-conform-aware command were not configured in the
parent policy, the parent policer would drop traffic that matches the conform rate of
the child policer but exceeds the conform rate of the parent policer.
The child-conform-aware command prevents the parent policer
from dropping any ingress traffic that conforms to the maximum rate specified in the
child policer.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map parentRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class-defaultRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# service-policy childRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# police rate percent 50RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# child-conform-awareRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action transmitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# exceed-action dropRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map childRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class EFRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# police rate 1 mbpsRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set mpls experimental imposition 4RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# exceed-action dropRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class AF1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# police rate percent 50RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set mpls experimental imposition 3RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set mpls experimental imposition 2
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
class (policy-map)
To specify the name of the class whose policy you want to create or change, use the
class command in policy map configuration mode. To
remove a class from the policy map, use the no form of this command.
(Optional) Specifies a quality-of-service (QoS) class.
class-name
Name of the class for which you want to configure or modify policy.
class-default
Configures the default class.
Command Default
No class is specified.
Type is QoS when not specified.
Command Modes
Policy map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.6.0
The type qos keywords were added.
Usage Guidelines
You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Policy Map Configuration Mode
Within a policy map, the class (policy-map) command can be
used to specify the name of the class whose policy you want to create or change. The
policy map must be identified first.
To identify the policy map (and enter the required policy map configuration mode), use
the policy-map command before you use the class
(policy-map) command. After you specify a policy map, you can
configure the policy for new classes or modify the policy for any existing classes in
that policy map.
Class Characteristics
The class name that you specify in the policy map ties the characteristics for that
class—that is, its policy—to the class map and its match criteria, as configured using
the class-map command.
The class-default keyword is used for configuring default
classes. It is a reserved name and cannot be used with user-defined classes. It is
always added to the policy map (type qos) even if the class is not configured. For
example, the following configuration shows that the class has not been configured, but
the running configuration shows ‘class class-default’.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map pm1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# end-policy-mapRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# end
!
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show running-config
!
policy-map pm1
class class-default
!
end-policy-map
!
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to create a policy map called policy1, which is defined
to shape class1 traffic at 30 percent and default class traffic at 20 percent.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match precedence ipv4 3
!
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:routerconfig-pmap-c)# shape average percent 30RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class-defaultRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# shape average percent 20
The default class is used for packets that do not satisfy configured match criteria for
class1. Class1 must be defined before it can be used in policy1, but the default class
can be directly used in a policy map, as the system defines it implicitly.
Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to one or more interfaces to specify a service policy.
class-map
To define a traffic class and the associated rules that match packets to the class, use
the class-map command in global configuration mode. To remove
an existing class map from the router, use the no form of this command.
(Optional) Specifies a quality-of-service (QoS) class-map.
match-all
(Optional) Specifies a match on all of the match criteria.
match-any
(Optional) Specifies a match on any of the match criteria. This is the
default.
class-map-name
Name of the class for the class map. The class name is used for the class
map and to configure policy for the class in the policy map. The class name
can be a maximum of 63 characters, must start with an alphanumeric
character, and in addition to alphanumeric characters, can contain any of
the following characters: . _ @ $ % + | # : ; - =
Command Default
Type is QoS when not specified.
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.6.0
The type qos keywords were added.
Release 3.7.0
Support was added for the character ‘=’ in the class-map-name argument. The argument accepts a maximum of 63 characters.
Usage Guidelines
You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The class-map command specifies the name of the class for
which you want to create or modify class map match criteria. Use of this command enables
class map configuration mode in which you can enter any match command to
configure the match criteria for this class. Packets arriving on the interface are
checked against the match criteria configured for a class map to determine if the packet
belongs to that class.
The following commands can be used in a class map:
match access-group
match atm
match[not]cos
match
destination-address
match [not] discard-class
match [not]dscp
match frame-relay
dlci
match[not]mpls experimental topmost
match [not]
precedence
match
precedence
match [not]
protocol
match[not]qos-group
match
source-address
match vlan
match vpls
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to specify class101 as the name of a class and defines a
class map for this class. The packets that match the access list 101 are matched to
class class101.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class101RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 101
Identifies specific three-bit experimental (EXP) field values in the topmost Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) label as match criteria for a class map.
Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help
function.
interface-path-id
Either a physical interface instance or a virtual interface instance as
follows:
Physical interface instance.
Naming notation is rack/slot/module/port and a
slash between values is required as part of the notation.
rack: Chassis number of the rack.
slot: Physical slot number of the
modular services card or line card.
module: Module number. A physical
layer interface module (PLIM) is always 0.
port: Physical port number of the
interface.
Note
In references to a Management Ethernet interface located on a route
processor card, the physical slot number is alphanumeric (RSP0RP0
or RP1) and the module is CPU0. Example: interface
MgmtEth0/RSP0RP1/CPU0/0.
Virtual interface instance.
Number range varies depending on interface type.
For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark
(?) online help function.
input
(Optional) Clears input QoS counters that are attached to the specified
interface.
output
(Optional) Clears output QoS counters that are attached to the specified
interface.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.9.0
The interface keyword was added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The clear qos counters interface command clears all input and
output QoS counters that are attached to a specified interface, unless the
input or output keyword is
specified. If the input or output
keyword is specified, only counters attached to the interface in a specified direction
are cleared.
The MIB counters are not reset with this command.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to clear QoS counters attached to Gigabit Ethernet
interface 0/1/0/9:
To enable IP header compression for a policy map class, use the compress
header ip command in policy map class configuration mode. To disable
header compression, use the no form of this command.
compressheaderip
nocompressheaderip
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Command Default
By default, IP header compression is disabled.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to enable IP header compression for a policy map
class:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 customer1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# compress header ipRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exit
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
conform-action
To configure the action to take on packets that conform to the rate limit, use the
conform-action command in policy map police
configuration mode. To remove a conform action from the policy-map, use the no
form of this command.
conform-action
[ drop | setoptions | transmit ]
noconform-action
[ drop | setoptions | transmit ]
Syntax Description
drop
(Optional) Drops the packet.
set options
(Optional) Configures the specified packet properties. Replace
options with one of the following keywords
or keyword arguments:
atm-clp
value—Sets the cell loss priority (CLP) bit.
cos
value—Sets the class of service value. Range is 0
to7.
cos
[inner]value—Sets the class of
service value. Range is 0 to 7.
dei—Sets the drop eligible
indicator (DEI). Can be 0 or 1.
discard-classvalue—Sets the discard class value. Range is 0 to
7.
dscpvalue—Sets the differentiated services code point
(DSCP) value and sends the packet. See Table 1 for a list of
valid values.
dscp
[tunnel] value—Sets the
differentiated services code point (DSCP) value and sends the packet. See
Table 1 for
a list of valid values. With the tunnel
keyword, the DSCP is set in the outer header.
mpls
experimental {topmost | imposition}
value—Sets the experimental (EXP) value of the
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) packet topmost label or imposed
label. Range is 0 to 7.
precedenceprecedence—Sets the IP precedence and sends the
packet See Table 2 for a list of valid values.
precedence
[tunnel] precedence—Sets the IP
precedence and sends the packet. See Table 1 for a list
of valid values. With the tunnel keyword, the
precedence is set in the outer header.
qos-groupvalue—Sets the QoS group value.
srp-priorityvalue—Sets the Spatial Reuse Protocol (SRP)
priority. Range is 0 to 7.
transmit
(Optional) Transmits the packets.
Command Default
By default, if no action is configured on a packet that conforms to the rate limit, the
packet is transmitted.
Command Modes
Policy map police configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.4.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.1
The setqos-group keyword was added.
Release 3.7.0
Multi-action policer set action for the conform-action command was added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For more information regarding the traffic policing feature, see the police rate command.
The conform-action command
can be used to set values for MPLS packets in the ingress direction. The values can be
set in the following combinations:
experimental, qos-group, and discard class
values, or
experimental and qos-group values, or
experimental and discard class values
Note
The multi-action policer sets cannot be used for IP packets.
Ingress and egress
Layer 2 subinterfaces
Layer 2 main interfaces
Layer 3 main interfaces
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
In the following example for MPLS, traffic policing is configured to set the MPLS
experimental bit for packets that conform to the rate limit:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map classRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match mpls experimental topmost 0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map childRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class prec1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# police rate 100000000 peak-rate 3125000 peak-burst 3125000 RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set mpls experimental imp 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set qos-group 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c-police)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 0/1/0/9RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if) service-policy input policy1
(Used for SIP 700 cards only.) Configures preclassification of ingress Layer 2 Frame Relay packets that have been previously marked as not discard eligible on an upstream node. These previously-marked packets are analyzed and preclassified by the color-aware policer on the ingress interface as part of the 2-rate 3-color (2R3C) traffic policing feature.
Configures the action to take on packets that violate the rate limit.
end-class-map
To end the configuration of match criteria for the class and to exit class map
configuration mode, use the end-class-map command in class map
configuration mode.
end-class-map
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.6.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to end the class map configuration and exit class map
configuration mode:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class101RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 101RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# end-class-map RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
Defines a traffic class and the associated rules that match packets to the class.
end-policy-map
To end the configuration of a policy map and to exit policy map configuration mode, use
the end-policy-map command in policy map configuration mode.
end-policy-map
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Policy map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.6.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to end the policy map configuration and exit policy map
configuration mode.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# police cir 250RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set precedence 3RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# end-policy-map RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to one or more interfaces to specify a service policy.
exceed-action
To configure the action to take on packets that exceed the rate limit, use the
exceed-action command in policy map police configuration
mode. To remove an exceed action from the policy-map, use the no form of this
command.
exceed-action
[ drop | setoptions | transmit ]
noexceed-action
[ drop | setoptions | transmit ]
Syntax Description
drop
(Optional) Drops the packet.
setoptions
Configures the specified packet properties. Replace
options with one of the following keywords
or keyword arguments:
atm-clpvalue—Sets the cell loss priority (CLP) bit.
cos [inner]value—Sets the class of service value. Range is 0
to 7.
cosvalue—Sets the class of service value. Range is 0
to 7.
dei—Sets the drop eligible indicator (DEI).
Can be 0 or 1.
discard-classvalue—Sets the discard class value. Range is 0 to
7.
dscpvalue—Sets the differentiated services code point
(DSCP) value and sends the packet. See Table 1 for a list of
valid values.
dscp
[tunnel] value—Sets the
differentiated services code point (DSCP) value and sends the packet. See
Table 1 for
a list of valid values. With the tunnel
keyword, the DSCP is set in the outer header.
fr-devalue—Sets the Frame Relay discard eligible (DE)
bit on the Frame Relay frame then transmits that packet. In congested
environments, frames with the DE bit set to 1 are discarded before frames
with the DE bit set to 0. The frame relay DE bit has only one bit and has
only two settings, 0 or 1. The default DE bit setting is 0.
mpls
experimental {topmost | imposition}
value—Sets the experimental (EXP) value of the
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) packet topmost label or imposed
label. Range is 0 to 7.
precedenceprecedence—Sets the IP precedence and sends the
packet. See Table 1 for a list
of valid values.
precedence
[tunnel] precedence—Sets the IP
precedence and sends the packet. See Table 1 for a list
of valid values. With the tunnel keyword, the
precedence is set in the outer header.
qos-groupvalue—Sets the QoS group value.
qos-groupvalue—Sets the QoS group value. Range is 0 to
63.
srp-priorityvalue—Sets the Spatial Reuse Protocol (SRP)
priority. Range is 0 to 7
transmit
(Optional) Transmits the packets.
Command Default
By default, if no action is configured on a packet that exceeds the rate limit, the
packet is dropped.
Command Modes
Policy map police configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.4.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.1
The set qos-group keyword was added.
Release 3.7.0
Multi-action policer set action for the exceed-action command was supported.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For more information regarding the traffic policing feature, see the police rate command.
The exceed-action command can
be used to set values for MPLS packets in the following combinations:
experimental, qos-group, and discard class
values, or
experimental and qos-group values, or
experimental and discard class values
Note
The multi-action policer sets cannot be used for IP packets.
Ingress and egress
Layer 2 subinterfaces
Layer 2 main interfaces
Layer 3 main interfaces
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
In the following example for MPLS, traffic policing is configured to drop traffic that
exceeds the rate limit:
(Used for SIP 700 cards only.) Configures preclassification of ingress Layer 2 Frame Relay packets that have been previously marked as discard eligible on an upstream node. These previously-marked packets are analyzed and preclassified by the color-aware policer on the ingress interface as part of the 2-rate 3-color (2R3C) traffic policing feature.
Configures the action to take on packets that violate the rate limit.
hw-module mrq-polling
To configure the threshold values for polling of MRQ counters, use the
hw-module mrq-polling command in global configuration
mode. To revert to the default threshold values for MRQ polling, use the no form
of this command.
Configures the maximum threshold value for the polling of MRQ counters.
min-threshold
Configures the minimum threshold value for the polling of MRQ counters.
threshold value
Threshold value. For Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+) line
cards, range is 1 to 16384. For 2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3) line
cards, range is 1 to 2048.
location
Configures threshold values for MRQ polling, for a designated node.
node-id
Location of node to be configured. The node-id argument is entered in
the rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
The default minimum threshold is 25 percent of the available MRQ counters, 4096 for
Engine 5+ line cards, 512 for Engine 3 line cards. The default maximum threshold is 75
percent of the available MRQ counters, 12288 for Engine 5+ line cards, 1536 for Engine 3
line cards.
Command Modes
Global configuration mode
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
This command is supported on 2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3) line cards and
Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+) line cards.
The maximum threshold value should always exceed the minimum threshold value. Attempting
to commit a configuration with threshold values which do not meet this criteria will
result in an error.
Task ID
Task ID
Operation
drivers
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to configure the maximum threshold value for MRQ
polling as 2000, at location 0/2/CPU0:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# configure terminal
Wed Aug 11 01:21:51.378 UTC
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# hw-module mrq-polling max-threshold 2000 location 0/2/CPU0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# commitRP/0/0/CPU0:router : config[65809]: %MGBL-CONFIG-6-DB_COMMIT : Configuration committed by user 'root'. Use 'show configuration commit changes 1000000015' to view the changes.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
The following example demonstrates how to configure the default maximum threshold value
for MRQ polling, at location 0/2/CPU0:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# configure terminal
Wed Aug 11 01:21:51.378 UTC
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# no hw-module mrq-polling max-threshold 2000 location 0/2/CPU0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# commitRP/0/0/CPU0:router : config[65809]: %MGBL-CONFIG-6-DB_COMMIT : Configuration committed by user 'root'. Use 'show configuration commit changes 1000000016' to view the changes.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
hw-module qos acc-l2-with-additional
To account Layer 2 with additional bytes, use the hw-module qos
acc-l2-with-additional command in global configuration mode. To
account Layer 2 without additional bytes, use the no form of this command.
Number of additional bytes to be used for Layer 2 accounting.
location
Configures additional Layer 2 bytes for the designated node.
node-id
Location of node to be configured. The node-id argument is entered in
the rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
No additional bytes are used in Layer 2 accounting.
Command Modes
Global configuration mode
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
This command is supported on 10 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 5) line cards and
Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+) line cards only.
Layer 2 accounting must be enabled on the location specified at node-id. The
specified interface must not be configured using the service-policy
(interface) command with the optional account
nolayer2 keyword, as this disables Layer 2 accounting of the
specified interface and enables Layer 3 accounting only.
This command configures all interfaces on the specified node to account Layer 2 using
the specfified number of additional bytes.
Task ID
Task ID
Operation
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to configure Layer 2 accounting to use an
additional 4 bytes, at location 0/2/CPU0:
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
hw-module qos account layer2 encapsulation
To configure Layer 2 encapsulation header lengths on a node, use the
hw-module qos account layer2 encapsulation command in
global configuration mode. To disable this functionality, use the no form of this
command.
Specifies the EEE 802.1q encapsulation size (18 bytes).
length value
Specifies the Layer 2 encapsulation length in bytes. Range is 1-50.
locationnode-id
Enables Layer 2 encapsulation header lengths for the designated node. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The default packet size for QoS accounting on 2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3)
line cards is Layer 3 packet size. This command allows you to specify Layer 2 packet
size for QoS accounting and to specify its length, which allows service providers to
limit the amount of traffic that is passed to particular users.
This command applies only to the 4-Port Gigabit Ethernet ISE line card. If enabled, this
command applies to all interfaces on the 4-port Gigabit Ethernet ISE line card. Ingress
QoS traffic uses the actual Layer 2 encapsulation size of each packet. For example, if
packets come from a dot1q interface the encapsulation size is 18 bytes. If packets come
from a QinQ interface, the encapsulation size is 22 bytes. Egress QoS traffic uses the
encapusulation size specified in this command regardless of the egress interface type.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure Layer 2 encapsulation header lengths to 25
on 0/1/CPU0:
To deny access control lists (ACL) on a node, use the hw-module qos acl-deny
enable command in global configuration mode. To disable this
functionality, use the no form of this command.
hw-moduleqosacl-denyenable
[ locationnode-id ]
nohw-moduleqosacl-denyenable
[ locationnode-id ]
Syntax Description
locationnode-id
Denies ACLs for the designated node. The node-id
argument is entered in the rack/slot/module
notation.
Command Default
By default, this feature is disabled.
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.6.0
This command was introduced on the Cisco XR 12000 Series Router.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For the hw-module qos acl-deny enable command to run
effectively, you must reload the line card (LC).
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos-ea
write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure an acl-deny function on location
0/1/CPU0:
Displays the acl-deny information for a particular location.
hw-module qos if-ref-bw
To enable the interface bandwidth as the Quality of Service (QoS) reference bandwidth,
use the hw-module qos if-ref-bw command in global
configuration mode. To revert to the default configuration, use the no form of
this command.
hw-moduleqosif-ref-bwenablelocationnode-id
nohw-moduleqosif-ref-bwenablelocationnode-id
Syntax Description
enable
Enables interface bandwidth as the QoS reference bandwidth.
location
Configures node for which the QoS reference bandwidth is to be defined.
node-id
Node for which the QoS reference bandwidth is to be defined. The node-id
argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
The class service rate is the default reference bandwidth.
Command Modes
Global configuration mode
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
New configuration will only take effect after a line card reload.
The QoS reference bandwidth is used for the conversion of time based values to
equivalent packet based interpretation.
Task ID
Task ID
Operation
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to enable the interface bandwidth as the QoS reference
bandwidth, on location 0/3/cpu0:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# hw-module qos if-ref-bw enable location 0/3/cpu0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# commitRP/0/0/CPU0:router:Aug 9 02:41:43.952 : qos_ea[238]: %QOS-QOSEA-6-INFO : QoSEA-Info: if-ref-bw config accepted, reload LC to take effect.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router:Aug 9 02:41:44.537 : config[65809]: %MGBL-CONFIG-6-DB_COMMIT : Configuration committed by user 'root'. Use 'show configuration commit changes 1000000012' to view the changes.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
The following example shows how to enable the class service rate as the QoS reference
bandwidth, on location 0/3/cpu0:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# no hw-module qos if-ref-bw enable location 0/3/cpu0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# commitRP/0/0/CPU0:router:Aug 9 02:41:58.168 : qos_ea[238]: %QOS-QOSEA-6-INFO : QoSEA-Info: if-ref-bw config accepted, reload LC to take effect.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router:Aug 9 02:41:58.669 : config[65809]: %MGBL-CONFIG-6-DB_COMMIT : Configuration committed by user 'root'. Use 'show configuration commit changes 1000000013' to view the changes.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#
Displays the Quality of Service (QoS) reference bandwidth.
hw-module qos multicast
To enable multicast egress quality of service (QoS) on a node, use the
hw-module qos multicast command in global configuration
mode. To disable this functionality, use the no form of this command.
hw-moduleqosmulticast
[ locationnode-id ]
nohw-moduleqosmulticast
[ locationnode-id ]
Syntax Description
locationnode-id
Enables egress QoS for the designated node. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
All multicast traffic is routed through the default queue.
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The enable keyword was deleted from the command syntax.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The hw-module qos multicast command enables multicast QoS,
which means that general, system wide QoS applies to multicast traffic as well.
Note
The following commands apply to Cisco XR 12000 Series Router Engine 3 line cards only: hw-module
qos multicast, hw-module qos multicast
priorityq, and show hw-module qos
multicast. For Engine 5 line cards, there is no requirement for a
command to enable QoS. On Engine 5 line cards, multicast QoS behaves like unicast QoS
(when a policy is attached to an interface).
If multicast QoS is disabled (which is the default value), all multicast traffic travels
to the default queue. When multicast routes are configured with QoS enabled, there may
be insufficient resources (PLU/TLU, MGIDs, and so on.) to support multicast QoS for all
routes. In such cases, some multicast routes are unchanged and associated multicast
traffic is routed to the default queue.
For complete information about QoS in Cisco IOS XR software, see the Cisco IOS XR
Modular Quality of Service Configuration Guide.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to enable multicast QoS on location 0/1/CPU0:
To divert multicast traffic slated for the priority queue to the default queue, use the
hw-module qos multicast priorityq disable command in
global configuration mode. To disable this functionality, use the no form of this
command.
Assigns a QoS priority value for the designated node. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
By default, all multicast traffic is routed to the priority queue (as defined by the QoS
policy).
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Note
The following commands apply to Engine 3 line cards only: hw-module qos
multicast, hw-module qos multicast priorityq
disable, and show hw-module qos
multicast. For Engine 5 line cards, there is no requirement for a
command to enable QoS. On Engine 5 line cards, multicast QoS behaves like unicast QoS
(when a policy is attached to an interface).
For complete information about QoS in Cisco IOS XR software, see the Cisco IOS XR
Modular Quality of Service Configuration Guide.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to divert multicast traffic slated for the priority
queue to the default queue on 0/1/CPU0:
To override the default policer granularity, use the hw-module qos pol-gran
location command in global configuration mode. To return to the
default policer granularity, use the no form of this command.
Policer granularity in kbps. Valid values are from 8 kbps to 64 kbps.
interface-path-id
Physical location of the Shared Interface Processor (SIP). Naming notation
is rack/slot/module and a slash between values is required as part of the notation.
rack—Chassis number of the rack.
slot—Physical slot number of the modular
services card or line card.
module—Module number. A physical layer
interface module (PLIM) is always 0.
Command Default
Default policer granularity values are:
Cisco 12000 SIP-401—64 kbps
Cisco 12000 SIP-501—64 kbps
Cisco 12000 SIP-601—64 kbps
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The police rate you set should be a multiple of the policer granularity. For example, if
the police rate is set to 72 kbps but the default policer granularity is 64 kbps, the
effective police rate is 64 kbps. To get an actual police rate of 72 kbps, configure the
policer granularity to 8 kbps. Because 72 is a multiple of 8, the police rate will be
exactly 72 kbps.
Policer granularity values, whether default or configured, apply to the SIP and to all
SPAs that are installed on the SIP.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to set the policer granularity to 8 on location
0/1/CPU0:
Displays policer granularity for a SPA Interface Processor.
hw-module qos queue-auto-defrag disable location
To disable automatic QoS queue defragmentation on a node, use the hw-module
qos queue-auto-defrag disable location command in global
configuration mode. To disable this functionality, use the no form of this
command.
Specifies the node in the rack/slot/module
notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.5.0
The enable keyword was removed.
Release 3.9.0
Added usage guidelines to refer to the hw-module queue-defrag location command for information on manually defragmenting QoS queues.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
When policies are frequently added and removed in large-scale configurations, the line
card might not have enough free contiguous QoS queues to accommodate a new policy—even
though there are enough free queues on the line card. Defragmentation solves this
problem by moving the minimum number of queues to make all occupied queues
contiguous.
There is the potential for packet loss during QoS queue defragmentation. However, if you
disable automatic defragmentation, you could get an error while trying to applying a
policy map because there are not enough queues available on the line card.
To avoid packet loss during defragmentation or running out of available queues, schedule
a maintenance window and manually defragment the QoS queues using the
hw-module queue-defrag location command.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to disable automatic QoS queue defragmentation on
location 0/1/CPU0. Automatic defragmentation is disabled for all interfaces on location
0/1/CPU0.
To manually defragment the QoS queues on a node, use the hw-module
queue-defrag location command in EXEC mode.
hw-modulequeue-defraglocationnode-id
Syntax Description
node-id
Specifies the node in the rack/slot/module
notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
When policies are frequently added and removed in large-scale configurations, the line
card might not have enough free contiguous QoS queues to accommodate a new policy—even
though there are enough free queues on the line card. Defragmentation solves this
problem by moving the minimum number of queues to make all occupied queues
contiguous.
You can manually defragment the QoS queues on a node regardless of whether automatic
defragmentation is enabled. If automatic defragmentation is disabled, you could get an
error while trying to applying a policy map because there are not enough free contiguous
queues available on the line card. In this case, use the hw-module
queue-defrag location command to defragment the queues on the
node.
To determine the number of occupied QoS queues and the level of fragmentation on a node,
use the show controllers egressq enaq location command.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
sysmgr
execute
root-lr
read
Examples
The following example shows how to manually defragment QoS queues on location 0/1/CPU0.
QoS queues are defragmented for all the interfaces on location 0/1/CPU0.
Displays information about QoS queue fragmentation on a node, use the show controllers egressq enaq location command in EXEC mode.
hw-module sanity
To configure sanity checking of ingress and egress queueing ASICs, use the
hw-module sanity command in global configuration mode.
To revert to the default sanity checking configuration, use the no form of this
command.
Configures sanity checking of egress queueing ASIC.
ingressq
Configures sanity checking of ingress queuing ASIC.
action
Configures action performed when buffer has depleted completely.
action
Action to be performed when buffer has depleted completely. Valid values
are
recarve—Recarve
performed as recovery.
none—No action performed
as recovery.
reload—Reload of line
card performed as recovery.
threshold
Configures remaining buffer threshold value. Warning printed on the console
when the remaining buffer threshold value is reached.
threshold-value
Buffer threshold value, as a percentage. Range: 1 to 100.
timer
Configures time lapse between successive sanity checks.
seconds
Time lapse between successive sanity checks, in seconds.
location
Configures sanity checking for a designated node.
node-id
Node for which sanity checking is to be configured. The node-id
argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
Action: pcds. Threshold: 5. Timer: 60
Command Modes
Global configuration mode
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
This command is supported on 10 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 5) line cards and
Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+) line cards only.
Use of the no form of this command, with the keyword
action, configures the action as none. The default action,
pcds, is equivalent to the user configurable action, none. When action is set as pcds or
none, a warning is printed on the console when the buffer threshold value is reached,
but no action is performed as recovery when the buffer has depleted completely.
Task ID
Task ID
Operation
drivers
read, write
root-lr
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure sanity checking of the ingress queuing ASIC
at 30 second intervals on location 0/2/CPU0, to print a warning on the console when the
buffer has depleted to 7 percent and to perform a line card reload when the buffer has
depleted completely.
Displays information about sanity checking of ingress and egress queueing ASICs.
match access-group
To identify a specified access control list (ACL) number as the match criteria for a
class map, use the match access-group command in class map
configuration mode. To remove ACL match criteria from a class map, use the no
form of this command.
Specifies the name of the IPv4 access group to be matched.
ipv6
Specifies the name of the IPv6 access group to be matched.
access-group-name
ACL whose contents are used as the match criteria against which packets are
checked to determine if they belong to this class.
Command Default
By default, if neither IPv6 nor IPv4 is specified as the match criteria for a class map,
IPv4 addressing is used.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.2.2
Support for IPv6 ACLs with source port matching was added in MQC policy
maps.
Release 3.3.0
No modification.
Release 3.3.1
Support for IPv4 ACLs with source port matching was added in MQC policy
maps.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For class-based features (such as marking, Modified Deficit Round Robin [MDRR], and
policing), you define traffic classes based on match criteria, including ACLs and input
interfaces. Packets satisfying the match criteria for a class constitute the traffic for
that class.
The match access-group command specifies an ACL whose contents
are used as the match criteria against which packets are checked to determine if they
belong to the class specified by the class map.
Access Control Entries with TCP fields such as, SYN, ACK and FIN in the corresponding ACL are not supported.
To use the match access-group command, you must first enter
the class-map command to specify the name of the class whose
match criteria you want to establish. You can specify up to eight IPv4 and IPv6 ACLs in
a match statement.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to specify a class map called map1 and configures map1
to be used as the match criteria for this class:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map map1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 map1
Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to one or more interfaces to specify a service policy.
match atm
To enable packet matching on the basis of the ATM operations, administration, and
maintenance (OAM) or cell loss priority (CLP), use the match
atm command in class-map configuration mode. To disable packet
matching, use the no form of this command.
matchatm
{ clp [clp-bit-value] | oam }
nomatchatm
{ clp [clp-bit-value] | oam }
Syntax Description
clp
Configures the ATM CLP bit to be matched. Use either 0 or 1 for
clp-bit-value.
clp-bit-value
(Optional) Value for the ATM CLP bit. Choose either 0 or 1 as the bit value.
If you do not specify a bit value, the default value of 1 is used.
oam
Configures the ATM OAM to be matched.
Command Default
Packets are not matched on the basis of the ATM CLP or OAM.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match atm command is supported on policy maps that are
attached to ATM main interfaces, ATM subinterfaces, or ATM permanent virtual circuits
(PVCs). However, policy maps (containing the match atm
command) that are attached to these types of ATM interfaces can be input policy maps
only.
The match atmcommand can be configured for ingress service policies only.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to specify a class map called map1 and configures map1
to be used as the match criteria for this class:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)#class-map map1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match atm oam
Identifies specific three-bit experimental (EXP) field values in the topmost Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) label as match criteria for a class map.
Identifies selected VLAN IDs as the match criteria for a class map.
match cos
To identify specified class of service (CoS) values as a match criteria in a class map,
use the match cos command in class map configuration mode. To
remove a specified CoS class value from the matching criteria for a class map, use the
no form of this command.
Class-of-service identifier that specifies the exact value from 0 to 7. Up
to eight CoS identifiers can be specified to match packets.
Command Default
No match criteria are specified.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match cos command specifies a class of service that is
used as the match criteria against which packets are checked to determine if they belong
to the class specified by the class map.
To use the match cos command, you must first enter the
class-map command to specify the name of the class whose
match criteria you want to establish. If you specify more than one match
cos command in a class map, the values of subsequent match
statements are added to the first match cos command.
The match cos
command is not supported on an output service policy attached to a Layer 3 interface
(POS interface or routed VLAN subinterface).
The match cos command is supported on egress Layer 2
interfaces, Layer 2 subinterfaces, and Layer 3 physical interfaces. Layer 3 physical
interfaces are supported, because it is possible for a Layer 3 interface to have
underlying Layer 2 subinterfaces. This command is
supported only on the ingress ethernet subinterface.
Ingress and egress
Layer 2 main interfaces and
subinterfaces
Layer 3 main interfaces
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure the service policy called policy1 and
attach service policy policy1 to an interface. In this example, class map cos146
evaluates all packets entering
Gigabit Ethernet subinterface 0/1/0/0.100 for
class of service values of 1, 4, or 6. If the incoming packet has been marked with any
of these CoS values, the packet is queued to the class queue with the bandwidth setting
of 300 kbps.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map cos146RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match cos 1 4 6RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class cos146RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# bandwidth 300RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 0/1/0/0.100RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy output policy1
Identifies specific three-bit experimental (EXP) field values in the topmost Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) label as match criteria for a class map.
Sets the Layer 2 class of service (CoS) value of an outgoing packet.
match dscp
To identify specific IP differentiated services code point (DSCP) values as match
criteria for a class map, use the match dscp command in class
map configuration mode. To remove a DSCP value from a class map, use the no form
of this command.
IP DSCP value identifier that specifies the exact value or a range of
values. Range is 0 to 63. Up to eight IP DSCP values can be specified to
match packets. Reserved keywords can be specified instead of numeric values.
Table 1 describes the
reserved keywords.
Command Default
Matching on both IP Version 4 (IPv4) and IPv6 packets is the default.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
The ipv6 and ipv4 keywords were added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match dscp command specifies a DSCP value that is used as
the match criteria against which packets are checked to determine if they belong to the
class specified by the class map.
To use the match dscp command, you must first enter the
class-map command to specify the name of the class whose
match criteria you want to establish. If you specify more than one match
dscp command in a class map, only the last command entered
applies.
The match dscp command examines the higher-order six bits in
the type of service (ToS) byte of the IP header. Only one of the eight values is needed
to yield a match (OR operation).
The command supports only eight IP DSCP values. If you try to configure more match
statements after all the eight values are matched, the statements get rejected.
The IP DSCP value is used as a matching criterion only. The value has no mathematical
significance. For instance, the IP DSCP value 2 is not greater than 1. The value simply
indicates that a packet marked with the IP DSCP value of 2 should be treated differently
than a packet marked with an IP DSCP value of 1. The treatment of these marked packets
is defined by the user through the setting of QoS policies in policy map class
configuration mode.
The reserved keywords listed in the following table can be specified instead of
numeric values.
Table 1 IP DSCP Reserved Keywords
DSCP Value
Reserved Keyword
0
default
10
AF11
12
AF12
14
AF13
18
AF21
20
AF22
22
AF23
26
AF31
28
AF32
30
AF33
34
AF41
36
AF42
38
AF43
46
EF
8
CS1
16
CS2
24
CS3
32
CS4
40
CS5
48
CS6
56
CS7
ipv4
ipv4 dscp
ipv6
ipv6 dscp
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure the service policy called policy1 and
attach service policy policy1 to an interface. In this example, class map dscp14
evaluates all packets entering Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) interface 0/1/0/0 for an IP
DSCP value of 14. If the incoming packet has been marked with the IP DSCP value of 14,
the packet is queued to the class queue with the bandwidth setting of 300 kbps.
Marks a packet by setting the IP differentiated services code point (DSCP) in the type of service (ToS) byte.
match fr-de
To match packets on the basis of the Frame Relay discard eligibility (DE) bit setting,
use the match fr-de command in class-map configuration mode.
To remove the match criterion, use the no form of this command.
matchfr-defr-de-bit-value
nomatchfr-defr-de-bit-value
Syntax Description
not
(Optional) Negates the specified match result.
fr-de-bit-value
Specifies the Frame Relay DE bit. Value
can be 0 or 1.
Command Default
Packets are not matched on the basis of the Frame Relay DE bit setting.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
This match criterion can be used under a subinterface (L2 PVC) using the
service-policy command, and it is supported in the
ingress direction only. This match criterion can also be used in hierarchical policy
maps.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to create a class called match-fr-de and match packets
on the basis of the Frame Relay DE bit setting. Packets match Frame Relay DE bit 1.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map match-fr-dRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match fr-de 1RP/0/0/CPU0:routerrouter(config-cmap)# end
Changes the discard eligible (DE) bit setting in the address field of a Frame Relay frame to 1 for all traffic leaving an interface.
match frame-relay dlci
To specify a Frame Relay packet data-link connection identifier (DLCI) number or number
range as a match criterion in a class map, use the match frame-relay
dlci command in class map configuration mode. To remove a previously
specified DLCI number as a match criterion, use the no form of this command.
A DLCI number associated with the packet. Range is from 16 to 1007.
StartDlci-EndDlci
A DLCI number range from 16 to 1007. Numbers are separated by a hyphen.
Command Default
No DLCI number is specified.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.4.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match criterion for the match frame-relay dlci command can
be used only on hierarchical policy maps.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to create the fr-dlci class map, and specify the Frame
Relay DLCI number range 100-200 as a match criterion. Packets with DLCIs matching this
criterion are placed in fr-dlci. In this example, class map fr-dlci evaluates all
packets entering Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) interface 0/1/0/0.1 for DLCIs in the range
from 100 through 200. If the incoming packet has been marked with the DLCI in the range
from 100 through 200, the packet is queued to the class queue with the bandwidth setting
of 300 kbps.
To identify specific three-bit experimental (EXP) field values in the topmost
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) label as match criteria for a class map, use the
match mpls experimental topmost command in class map
configuration mode. To remove experimental field values from the class map match
criteria, use the no form of the command.
Experimental value that specifies the exact value from 0 to 7. Up to eight
experimental values can be specified to match MPLS headers.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
The not keyword was added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match mpls experimental topmost command is
used by the class map to identify MPLS experimental values matching on a packet.
To use the match mpls experimental topmost
command, you must first enter the class-map command to specify
the name of the class whose match criteria you want to establish. If you specify more
than one match mpls experimental topmost command in a class
map, the new values are added to the existing match statement.
This command examines the three experimental bits contained in the
topmost label of an MPLS packet. Up to eight experimental values can be matched in one
match statement. For example, match mpls experimental topmost 2 4 5 7 returns
matches for experimental values of 2, 4, 5, and 7. Only one of the four values is needed
to yield a match (OR operation).
The experimental values are used as a matching criterion only. The value
has no mathematical significance. For instance, the experimental value 2 is not greater
than 1. The value indicates that a packet marked with the experimental value of 2 should
be treated differently than a packet marked with the EXP value of 1. The treatment of
these different packets is defined by the user through the setting of QoS policies in
policy map class configuration mode.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure the service policy called
policy1 and attach service policy policy1 to an interface. In this example, class map
mplsmap1 evaluates all packets entering GigabitEthernet interface 0/1/0/9 for an MPLS
experimental value of 1. If the incoming packet has been marked with the MPLS
experimental value of 1, the packet is queued to the class queue with the bandwidth
setting of 300 kbps.
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
match precedence
To identify IP precedence values as match criteria, use the match
precedence command in class map configuration mode. To remove
precedence values from a class map, use the no form of this command.
An IP precedence value identifier that specifies the exact value. Range is
from 0 to 7. Reserved keywords can be specified instead of numeric values.
Table 1 describes the
reserved keywords.
Up to eight precedence values can be matched in one match statement.
Command Default
Matching on both IP Version 4 (IPv4) and IPv6 packets is the default.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match precedence command specifies a
precedence value that is used as the match criteria against which packets are checked to
determine if they belong to the class specified by the class map.
To use the match precedence command, you must
first enter the class-map command to specify the name of the
class whose match criteria you want to establish. If you specify more than one
match precedence command in a class map, only the last
command entered applies.
The match precedence command examines the
higher-order three bits in the type of service (ToS) byte of the IP header. Up to eight
precedence values can be matched in one match statement. For example, match
precedence ipv4 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 returns matches for IP precedence values of 0, 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7. Only one of the eight values is needed to yield a match (OR
operation).
The precedence values are used as a matching criterion only. The value
has no mathematical significance. For instance, the precedence value 2 is not greater
than 1. The value simply indicates that a packet marked with the precedence value of 2
is different than a packet marked with the precedence value of 1. The treatment of these
different packets is defined by the user through the setting of QoS policies in policy
map class configuration mode.
The following table
lists the IP precedence
value number and associated name in descending order of importance.
Table 2 IP Precedence Values and Names
Value
Name
0
routine
1
priority
2
immediate
3
flash
4
flash-override
5
critical
6
internet
7
network
ipv4
ipv4 precedence
ipv6
ipv6 precedence
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure the service policy called
policy1 and attach service policy policy1 to an interface. In this example, class map
ipprec5 evaluates all packets entering GigabitEthernet interface 0/1/0/9 for a
precedence value of 5. If the incoming packet has been marked with the precedence value
of 5, the packet is queued to the class queue with the bandwidth setting 300 kbps.
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
match qos-group
To identify specific quality-of-service (QoS) group values as match criteria in a class
map, use the match qos-group command in class map
configuration mode. To remove a specific QoS group value from the matching criteria for
a class map, use the no form of this command.
QoS group value identifier that specifies the exact value from 0 to
31
or a range of values from 0 to
31. Up to eight values can be entered in one match statement.
Command Default
No match criteria are specified.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The qos-group-value argument was deleted from the no match command.
Release 3.7.0
Up to eight values or ranges on a single match statement, and up to 32
values or ranges specified on up to eight match statements for qos-group-value, were supported.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match qos-group command sets the match criteria for
examining QoS groups marked on the packet. Up to eight QoS group values can be
matched in one match statement. For example, match qos-group 4 9 11 15 16 21 30
31 returns matches for QoS group values of 4, 9, 11, 15, 16, 21, 30, and 31. Only one of the eight values is needed to yield a match
(OR operation).
The match qos-group command is used on the ingress match
to support QoS Policy Propagation using BGP (QPPB). To use this command, you must first
enter the class-map command to specify the name of the class
whose match criteria you want to establish. If you specify more than one
match qos-group command in a class map, the subsequent
match statements are added to the first match qos-group
command.
The QoS group value is used as a matching criterion only. The value has
no mathematical significance. For instance, the QoS group value 2 is not greater than 1.
The value simply indicates that a packet marked with the QoS group value of 2 should be
treated differently than a packet marked with a QoS group value of 1. The treatment of
these different packets is defined using the service-policy
command in policy map class configuration mode.
The QoS group setting is limited in scope to the local router. Typically,
the QoS group is set on the local router and is used in conjunction with WRED or MDRR to
give differing levels of service based on the group identifier.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows a service policy called policy1 attached to
an interface. In this example, class map qosgroup5 will evaluate all packets leaving
GigabitEthernet 0/1/0/9 for a QoS group value of 5. If the packet has been marked with
the QoS group value of 5, the packet is queued to the class queue with the bandwidth
setting 300 kbps.
Sets the quality of service (QoS) group identifiers on packets.
match vlan
To identify selected VLAN IDs as the match criteria for a class map, use the
match vlan command in class map configuration mode. To
remove VLAN ID match criteria from a class map, use the no form of this command.
matchvlanvlanid
[ vlanid1
...
vlanid7 ]
nomatchvlanvlanid
[ vlanid1
...
vlanid7 ]
Syntax Description
vlanid
VLAN identifier that specifies the exact value from 1 to 4094 or a range of
values from 1 to 4094. Up to eight values can be specified in a match
statement.
Command Default
No match criteria are specified.
Command Modes
Class map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
Changed the range value from 0 to 8096. to 1 to 4094.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The match vlan command specifies a VLAN ID that
is used as the match criteria against which packets are checked to determine if they
belong to the class specified by the class map.
To use the match vlan command, you must first
enter the class-map command to specify the name of the class
whose match criteria you want to establish. If you specify more than one
match vlan command in a class map, up to eight values of
the subsequent match statements are added to the first match
vlan command, exceeding which, the statement is rejected.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure the service policy called
policy1 and attach service policy policy1 to an interface. In this example, class map
vlan1 evaluates all packets entering Gigabit Ethernet interface 0/1/0/0 for VLAN IDs of
1234, 1698, and all the VLAN IDs in the range 3000 to 4000. If the incoming packet has
been marked with any of these VLAN IDs, the packet is queued to the class queue with the
bandwidth setting of 300 kbps.
Defines a traffic class and the associated rules that match packets to the class.
police rate
To configure traffic policing and enter policy map police configuration mode, use the
police rate command in policy map class configuration
mode. To remove traffic policing from the configuration, use the no form of this
command.
Committed information rate (CIR). Range is from 1 to 4294967295.
For 8 kbps granularity the maximum value is 2.1 gbps, for 16 kbps
granularity the maximum value is 4.2gbps, and for 32kbps granularity the
maximum value is 8.4gbps.
units
(Optional) Unit of measurement for the CIR. Values can be:
bps—bits per second (default)
gbps—gigabits per second
kbps—kilobits per second
mbps—megabits per second
percent percentage
Specifies the police rate as a percentage of the CIR. Range is from 1 to 100. See the Usage Guidelines for information on how to use this keyword.
burst burst-size
(Optional) Specifies the burst size (in the specified burst-units). Range is from 1 to 4294967295.
burst-units
(Optional) Unit of measurement for the burst values. Values can be:
bytes—bytes (default)
gbytes—gigabytes
kbytes—kilobytes
mbytes—megabytes
ms—milliseconds
us—microseconds
peak-ratevalue
(Optional) Specifies the Peak Information Rate (PIR) in the specified
units. Range is from 1 to 4294967295.
peak-burstpeak-burst
(Optional) Specifies the peak burst size in the specified
burst-units. Range is from 1 to
4294967295.
Command Default
No restrictions on the flow of data are applied to any interface.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced without the pir and violate-action keywords.
Release 3.3.0
The command name was changed from police cir to police rate.
The keywords bc, be, and pir were changed to burst, peak-burst, and peak-rate, respectively.
The units argument was added.
The default units for the rate, peak rate, and burst rate changed from
kbps to bps.
The keywords mpls experimental imposition were added to the action argument.
Release 3.4.0
This command now enters policy-map police configuration mode.
The conform-action, exceed-action and violate-action keywords changed into commands within the policy-map police
configuration mode.
The cos and transmit keywords were added to the action argument. The atm-clp keyword was added.
Release 3.6.0
The packets burst value option was removed.
Release 3.7.0
Hierarchical ingress policing was supported.
Release 3.9.0
The granularity of the police rate specified changed to 8 kbps.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The traffic policing feature works with a single-token bucket
algorithm.
The police rate can set the DSCP, the
precedence, or the discard class for IP packets, and experimental and discard-class
values for MPLS packets.
For bundled interfaces, traffic policing can be configured only
as a percentage.
Policing can be applied in both ingress and egress directions.
The parameters set by the action keywords are rounded by the hardware. To
check the actual values programmed in the hardware use the show qos
interface command.
For police rate commands, interpret the percent keyword in this way:
For a one-level policy, the percent keyword specifies the CIR as a percentage of the link rate. For example, the command police rate percent 35 configures the CIR as 35% of the link rate.
For a two-level policy, in the parent policy, the percent keyword specifies the parent CIR as a percentage of the link rate. In the child policy, the percent keyword specifies the child CIR as a percentage of the maximum policing or shaping rate of the parent. If traffic policing or shaping is not configured on the parent, the parent inherits the interface policing or shaping rate.
Note
Configured values take into account the Layer 2 encapsulation applied to traffic.
This applies to both ingress and egress policing. For POS/SDH transmission, the
encapsulation is considered to be 4 bytes. For Ethernet, the encapsulation is
14 bytes; whereas for 802.1Q, the encapsulation is 18 bytes.
If the burst value is not specifically configured, it is
automatically set to equate to 250 msec-worth of the CIR value. For example, if a CIR
value of 1000000 kbps is entered, the burst value is calculated to be 32000000 bytes.
However, the maximum burst value supported is 16777215 bytes.
Hierarchical policing is also supported. In such a configuration, both
parent and child policies have class-maps containing policing statements, as in this example:
!
policy-map child
class gold
police rate percent 50
conform-action set precedence immediate
exceed-action drop
!
!
policy-map parent
class match_all
police rate 10000 kbps burst 15000
exceed-action drop
service-policy child
!
The router supports hierarchical ingress policing, which
consists of a two-level hierarchical policy-map. The two levels are:
Parent level: Consists of a class-default
or match-vlan class (in nCmD model) only and has policing with only transmit/drop
actions.
Child level: Consists of a flat policy that
can be configured with any action other than the queuing action. This level does not
contain configurations that require a continuous bit support.
You can police the ingress interface while applying different
classification submodels on the ingress interfaces. The order of the actions within the
hierarchical policy-map is from child to parent as specified by the Modular Quality of
Service command-line interface (MQC). This is with the exception of the queuing action (shape), which is
executed after any police/set actions. If a police action is configured in a child
policy, the child police action is executed before the parent police action.
The police action is invoked with only transmit/drop actions
under the conform-action and exceed-action options specified for class-default traffic.
This example explains a hierarchical policer
configuration:
!
policy-map parent
class class-default
service-policy child
police rate percent 50
conform-action transmit
exceed-action drop
!
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
Example
In this example for MPLS, traffic policing is configured with
the average rate at 250 kbps, and the normal burst size at 50 bytes for all packets
leaving GigabitEthernet interface 0/1/0/9:
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
policy-map
To create or modify a policy map that can be attached to one or more interfaces to
specify a service policy, use the policy-map command in global
configuration mode. To delete a policy map, use the no form of this command.
policy-map
[ typeqos ]
policy-name
nopolicy-map
[ typeqos ]
policy-name
Syntax Description
type qos
(Optional) Specifies a quality-of-service (QoS) policy map.
policy-name
Name of the policy map.
Command Default
A policy map does not exist until one is configured. Because a policy map
is applied to an interface, no restrictions on the flow of data are applied to any
interface until a policy map is created.
Type is QoS when not specified.
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
Maximum number of classes permitted per policy map was increased to 32.
Release 3.6.0
The type qos keywords were added.
Maximum number of classes permitted per policy map was increased to
512.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Use the policy-map command to specify the name
of the policy map to be created, added to, or modified before you can configure policies
for classes whose match criteria are defined in a class map. Entering the
policy-map command enables policy map configuration mode
in which you can configure or modify the class policies for that policy map.
You can configure class policies in a policy map only if the classes have
match criteria defined for them. Use the class-map and
match commands to configure the match criteria for a
class. Because you can configure a maximum of 512 classes in one policy map, no policy
map can contain more than 512 class policies. The maximum number of 512 classes per
policy includes the implicit default class and its child policies.
A single policy map can be attached to multiple interfaces concurrently.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following examples show how to create a policy map called policy1 and
configures two class policies included in that policy map. The policy map is defined to
contain policy specification for class1 and the default class (called class-default) to
which packets that do not satisfy configured match criteria are directed. Class1
specifies policy for traffic that matches access control list 136.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 136RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# police cir 250RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set precedence 3RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class-defaultRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# queue-limit 1000000 bytes
Defines a traffic class and the associated rules that match packets to the class.
priority (QoS)
To assign a priority to a class of traffic belonging to a policy map, use the
priority command in policy map class configuration mode.
To remove a previously specified priority for a class, use the no form of this
command.
priority
[ levelpriority-level ]
nopriority
Syntax Description
level priority-level
(Optional) Sets the class priority level value. Value can be 1. Default level is 1. Level 1 traffic has higher priority.
Command Default
If a priority action is not configured in a class, traffic in that class is not serviced with strict priority.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.9.0
The level keyword was added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The priority command configures low-latency
queueing (LLQ), providing strict priority queueing (PQ). Strict PQ allows
delay-sensitive data such as voice to be dequeued and sent before packets in other
queues are dequeued. When a class is marked as high priority using the
priority command, we recommend that you configure a
policer to limit the priority traffic. This policer ensures that the priority traffic
does not starve all other traffic on the line card, which protects low-priority traffic
from starvation. Use the police rate to explicitly configure
the policer.
The priority command sets up classes based on a
variety of criteria (not just User Datagram Protocol [UDP] ports) and assigns a priority
to them.
The bandwidth and
priority commands cannot be used in the same class,
within the same policy map. These commands can be used together in the same policy
map, but only when the priority class has the policer limit
configured.
There cannot be a WRED action along with a priority configuration in the same class. Only one class under a policy map can have a priority action configured.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to configure priority queuing for the
policy map named policy1:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# priority level 1
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
queue-limit
To specify or modify the maximum number of packets the queue can hold for a class policy
configured in a policy map, use the queue-limit command in
policy map class configuration mode. To remove the queue packet limit from a class, use
the no form of this command.
queue-limit
{ value [unit] | atm-clpatm-valueatm-unittail-value [tail-unit] }
noqueue-limit
Syntax Description
value
Maximum threshold for tail drop in bytes. Range is from 1 to 4294967295.
unit
(Optional) Units for the queue limit value. Values can be:
cells—cells (ATM subinterfaces only)
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Note
When the specified units is packets, packets
are assumed to be 256 bytes in size.
atm-clp
Specifies an ATM cell loss priority (CLP)-based queue limit.
atm-value
Maximum threshold for the ATM CLP value. Range is from 1 to 4294967295.
atm-unit
ATM CLP unit. Values can be:
cells—cells
ms—milliseconds
us—microseconds
tail-value
Maximum threshold for tail drop. Range is from 1 to 4294967295.
tail-unit
(Optional) Tail drop unit. Values can be:
cells—cells
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Command Default
100 milliseconds: maximum threshold for tail drop
10 milliseconds: maximum threshold for high-priority queues
Maximum threshold units are in packets.
Note
The default queue limit is 200 ms. Default queue limits are calculated considering
200 ms of data and assuming an average packet size of 256 bytes.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
Command name changed from queue-limit bytes to queue-limit.
Command order modified to place value before units.
The units argument was added.
Default units was changed from bytes to packets.
Release 3.6.0
The value range of 1 to 1000000000 has changed to 1 to 4294967295.
The cellsunit keyword and argument were added.
The default threshold for tail drop changed from 200 milliseconds to 100
milliseconds.
Release 3.8.0
The atm-clp keyword was added for supporting the virtual circuit (VC) queuing
on the segmentation and reassembly (SAR) in the egress direction.
Two discard threshold settings, CLP1 and CLP0+1, were supported using an
extension to the queue-limit modular QoS CLI (MQC) configuration.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Packets satisfying the match criteria for a class accumulate in the queue
reserved for the class until they are serviced by the scheduling mechanism. The
queue-limit command defines the maximum threshold for a
class. When that threshold is reached, enqueued packets to the class queue result in
tail drop (packet drop). Tail drop is a congestion avoidance technique that drops
packets when an output queue is full, until congestion is eliminated.
Use the show qos interface command to display
the queue limit and other policer values.
Queue Limit Default Values
The following default values are used when
queue-limit is not configured in the class:
If QoS is not configured:
The queue limit is 16384 packets for the class default and priority queues
when no actions are configured.
If QoS is configured and Weighted Random
Early Detection (WRED) is not configured:
Queue limit is 200 ms at the guaranteed service rate of the queue for
non-priority queues.
When priority is configured with policing with an exceed action of DROP: queue limit = (rate_kpbs) * 200 / 8,
where rate_kbps = (Police Be + Police Bc) * 8 / 1000,
and Bc is conformed police rate, Be is exceeded police rate
When priority configured with policing with an exceed action other than
DROP: queue limit = (rate_kpbs) * 200 / 8,
where rate_kbps = police rate.
When priority configured without policing: queue limit = (rate_kpbs) * 200 / 8, where rate_kbps = interface rate / 2 for flat policies, and rate_kbps = parent shape rate / 2 for hierarchicalpolicies.
If QoS is configured and WRED is configured:
Queue limit is two times the WRED maximum threshold. The
maximum threshold
is an explicitly configured value.
If more than one WRED profile is configured in the class, the maximum
threshold is the maximum for all profiles.
When the queue-limit is configured in time units,
the guaranteed service rate is used to compute the queue limit.
When the queue limit is configured in time units, the guaranteed
service rate of the class is used to calculate the queue limit in bytes. For
example: time_unit in ms * guaranteed_service_rate in kbps / 8 is
equivalent to queue-limit in bytes.
The following restrictions apply to queue limits:
The maximum queue limit is 262143
bytes.
Only time-based units are allowed on bundle
targets.
Guaranteed Service Rate
The guaranteed service rate is defined as the service rate of the queue
when all queues are backlogged and derived as:
Displays QoS information for a specific interface.
random-detect
To enable random early detection (RED), use the random-detect
command in policy map class configuration mode. To remove RED, use the no form of
this command.
Minimum threshold in number of packets. The value range of this argument is
from 0 to 1073741823 in bytes.
max-threshold
Maximum threshold the units specified. The value range of this argument is
from the value of the min-threshold argument or
23, whichever is larger, to 1073741823. When the average queue length
exceeds the maximum threshold, RED drops all packets with the specified
discard class value.
units
(Optional) Units for the threshold values. Values can be:
cells—cells (ATM subinterfaces only)
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Command Default
Default unit for max-threshold and
min-threshold is packets.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.6.0
The cellsunit was added.
The default keyword was removed.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The RED congestion avoidance technique takes advantage of the congestion
control mechanism of TCP. By randomly dropping packets before periods of high
congestion, RED tells the packet source to decrease its transmission rate. Assuming the
packet source is using TCP, it decreases its transmission rate until all the packets
reach their destination, indicating that the congestion is cleared. You can use RED as a
way to cause TCP to slow transmission of packets. TCP not only pauses, but it also
restarts quickly and adapts its transmission rate to the rate that the network can
support.
RED distributes losses in time and maintains normally low queue depth
while absorbing traffic bursts. When enabled on an interface, RED begins dropping
packets when congestion occurs at a rate you select during configuration.
When time units are used, the guaranteed service rate is used to compute
thresholds.
The default values for RED are calculated as follows:
default min_threshold = 0.03 * B
default max_threshold = 0.1 * B
where B is the bandwidth for the queue. When all the queues are
congested, the bandwidth for the queue is equal to the guaranteed service rate of the
queue.
The mark probability is always set to 1.
When the value of the units argument is
packets, packets are assumed to be 256 bytes in size.
For the random-detect command to take
effect, you must configure the shape average,
bandwidth (QoS), or bandwidth
remaining commands in the user-defined policy map class. This
dependency is not applicable to the class default for the policy map class.
Weighted Random Early Detection
The following restrictions apply to Weighted Random Early Detection
(WRED):
For thresholds in time units, the
guaranteed service rate is used to calculate the thresholds in bytes.
Default RED minimum
threshold—30 ms at the guaranteed service rate.
Default RED maximum threshold—100 ms as the
guaranteed service rate.
For bundles, queue limit and WRED thresholds are supported in time units
only.
Note
RED is enabled when you configure any of the supported
random-detect commands.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to enable RED using a minimum threshold
value of 1000000 and a maximum threshold value of 2000000:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# random-detect 1000000 2000000
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
random-detect discard-class
To configure the Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) thresholds for packets with a
specific discard class value, use the random-detect
discard-class command in policy map class configuration mode. To return
the thresholds to the default for the discard class, use the no form of this
command.
Discard class value. Valid values are from 0 to 7. Up to eight values can be
entered separated by commas.
min-threshold
Minimum threshold in number of packets. The value range of this argument is
from 0 to 1073741823 in bytes.
max-threshold
Maximum threshold in number of packets. The value range of this argument is
from the value of the min-threshold argument to
1073741823. When the average queue length exceeds the maximum threshold,
WRED drops all packets with the specified discard class value.
units
(Optional) Units for the threshold values. Values can be:
cells—cells
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Command Default
Default unit for max-threshold and
min-threshold is packets.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The units argument was added to allow specifying the units of the
thresholds.
The discard-value min-threshold max-threshold arguments were deleted form the
no random-detect discard-class command.
Release 3.6.0
The discard-value argument can accept up to eight values separated by commas.
The cellsunit
was added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For the random-detect discard-class command
to take effect, you must configure the shape average,
bandwidth (QoS), or bandwidth
remaining commands in the user-defined policy map class. This
dependency is not applicable to the class default for the policy map class.
WRED is a congestion avoidance mechanism that slows traffic by randomly
dropping packets when congestion exists. WRED is most useful with protocols like TCP
that respond to dropped packets by decreasing the transmission rate.
When you configure the random-detect
discard-class command on an interface, packets are given preferential
treatment based on the discard class of the packet.
When the value of the units argument is
packets, packets are assumed to be 256 bytes in size.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to set the discard class values for
discard class 3 to a minimum byte threshold of 1000000 and a maximum byte threshold of
2000000:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# random-detect discard-class 3 1000000 2000000
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
random-detect dscp
To configure the Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) thresholds for packets with a
specific differentiated services code point (DSCP) value, use the
random-detect dscp command in policy map class
configuration mode. To return the thresholds to the default for the DSCP value, use the
no form of this command.
DSCP value. Up to eight dscp-values (any
combination of numbers, ranges, and reserved keywords) can be used separated
by commas. The following arguments are supported:
Number from 0 to 63 that sets
the DSCP value.
Range of DSCP values. Range is
from 0 to 63.
Reserved keywords can be
specified instead of numeric values. Table 1 describes the
reserved keywords.
min-threshold
Minimum threshold in number of packets. The value range of this argument is
from 0 to 1073741823. When the average queue length reaches the minimum
threshold, WRED randomly drops some packets with the specified DSCP value.
max-threshold
Maximum threshold in number of packets. The value range of this argument is
from the value of the min-threshold argument to
1073741823. When the average queue length exceeds the maximum threshold,
WRED drops all packets with the specified DSCP value.
units
(Optional) Units for the threshold values. Values can be:
cells—cells
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Command Default
Match packets with default DSCP (000000).
Default unit for max-threshold and
min-threshold is packets.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The units argument was added to allow specifying the units of the
thresholds.
The dscp-value min-threshold max-threshold arguments were deleted from the
no random-detect dscp command.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
WRED is a congestion avoidance mechanism that slows traffic by randomly
dropping packets when congestion exists. WRED is most useful with protocols like TCP
that respond to dropped packets by decreasing the transmission rate.
For the random-detect dscp command to take
effect, you must configure the shape average,
bandwidth (QoS), or bandwidth
remaining commands in the user-defined policy map class. This
dependency is not applicable to the class default for the policy map class.
Reserved keywords can be specified instead of numeric values. See Table 1 for the list of keywords.
When the value of the units argument is
packets, packets are assumed to be 256 bytes in size.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows that for packets with DSCP AF11, the WRED
minimum threshold is 1,000,000 bytes and the maximum threshold is 2,000,000 bytes:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# random-detect dscp AF11 1000000 2000000
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
random-detect exp
To configure the Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) thresholds for packets marked
with a specific MPLS experimental (EXP) bit value, use the random-detect
exp command in policy map class configuration mode. To return the
value to the default, use the no form of this command.
MPLS experimental value. Valid values are from 0 to 7. Up to eight values
can be entered separated by commas.
min-threshold
Minimum threshold in number of packets. The value range of this argument is
from 0 to 1073741823 in bytes.
max-threshold
Maximum threshold in units specified. The value range of this argument is
from the value of the min-threshold argument to
1073741823. When the average queue length exceeds the maximum threshold,
WRED drops all packets with the specified experimental value.
units
(Optional) Units for the threshold values. Values can be:
cells—cells
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Command Default
Default unit for max-threshold and
min-threshold is packets.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The exp-value min-threshold max-threshold arguments were deleted form the no random-detect exp command.
Release 3.6.0
The exp-value argument can accept up to eight values separated by commas.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For the random-detect exp command to take
effect, you must configure the shape average,
bandwidth (QoS), or bandwidth
remaining commands in the user-defined policy map class. This
dependency is not applicable to the class default for the policy map class.
WRED is a congestion avoidance mechanism that slows traffic by randomly
dropping packets when congestion exists. WRED is most useful with protocols like TCP
that respond to dropped packets by decreasing the transmission rate.
When the value of the units argument is
packets, packets are assumed to be 256 bytes in size.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows that for Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)
packets with an EXP field value of 4, the WRED minimum threshold is 1,000,000 bytes and
the maximum threshold is 2,000,000 bytes:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# random-detect exp 4 1000000 20000
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
random-detect precedence
To configure the Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) thresholds for packets with a
particular IP precedence, use the random-detect precedence
command in policy map class configuration mode. To return the thresholds to the default
for the precedence, use the no form of this command.
An IP precedence value identifier that specifies the exact value. Range is
from 0 to 7. Reserved keywords can be specified instead of numeric values.
Table 1
describes the reserved keywords. Up to eight values or reserved keywords can
be entered separated by commas.
min-threshold
Minimum threshold in number of packets. Range is from 0 to 1073741823 in
bytes.
max-threshold
Maximum threshold in the units specified. Range is from the value of the min-threshold argument to 1073741823. When the average queue length exceeds the
maximum threshold, WRED drops all packets with the specified precedence
value.
units
(Optional) Units for the threshold values. Values can be:
cells—cells
ms—milliseconds
packets—packets (default)
us—microseconds
Command Default
Default unit for max-threshold and
min-threshold is packets.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
The units argument was added to allow specifying the units of the
thresholds.
Release 3.4.0
The precedence-value min-threshold max-threshold arguments were deleted from the no random-detect precedence command.
Release 3.6.0
The precedence-value argument can accept up to eight values or reserved keywords
separated by commas.
The cellsunit
keword and argument were added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For the random-detect precedence command to
take effect, you must configure the shape average,
bandwidth (QoS), or bandwidth
remaining commands in the user-defined policy map class. This
dependency is not applicable to the class default for the policy map class.
WRED is a congestion avoidance mechanism that slows traffic by randomly
dropping packets when congestion exists. WRED is most useful with protocols like TCP
that respond to dropped packets by decreasing the transmission rate.
When you configure the random-detect command on
an interface, packets are given preferential treatment based on the IP precedence of the
packet. Use the random-detect precedence command to adjust the
treatment for different precedences.
When the value of the units argument is
packets, packets are assumed to be 256 bytes in size.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows that for packets with precedence 3, the WRED
minimum threshold is 1,000,000 bytes and maximum threshold is 2,000,000 bytes:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)#random-detect precedence 3 1000000 2000000
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
service-policy (interface)
To attach a policy map to an input interface or output interface to
be used as the service policy for that interface, use the service-policy command in the
appropriate configuration mode. To remove a service policy from an input or output
interface, use the no form of the command.
Attaches the specified policy map to the input interface.
output
Attaches the specified policy map to the output interface.
policy-map
Name of a service policy map (created using the
policy-map command) to be attached.
account nolayer2
(Optional) Turns off layer 2 QoS-specific accounting and enables Layer 3 QoS
accounting.
Command Default
No service policy is specified.
Command Modes
Interface configuration
Layer 2 transport configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The pre-decrypt, post-decrypt, and pre-encrypt keywords were added for IPSec.
Release 3.5.0
The pre-decrypt, post-decrypt, and pre-encrypt keywords were removed.
Release 3.6.0
The command was supported in Layer 2 transport configuration mode.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
You can attach a single policy map to one or more interfaces to specify
the service policy for those interfaces. The class policies composing the policy map are
then applied to packets that satisfy the class map match criteria for the class. To
apply a new policy to an interface, you must remove the previous policy. A new policy
cannot replace an existing policy.
The default packet size for QoS accounting on 10 Gbps IP Services
Engine (Engine 5) and Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+) line cards is Layer
2 packet size. The account nolayer2 option allows you to
specify a Layer 3 packet size for QoS accounting. This option is enabled in a policy map
and applies to a specific interface. It does not apply to any other interface on the
line card or to any other line card on the router.
Less traffic passes through the network using Layer 2 packet size
than using Layer 3 packet size. The account nolayer2 option
allows service providers to tailor the amount of traffic that is passed to particular
users, and to use QoS accounting based on Layer 3 packet size.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows policy map policy1 applied to
Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) interface 0/2/0/0:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match precedence ipv4 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set precedence 2RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/2/0/0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy output policy1
Uses a service policy as a QoS policy within a policy map.
service-policy (policy map class)
To use a service policy as a QoS policy within a policy map (called a hierarchical
service policy), use the service-policy command in
policy map class configuration mode. To disable a particular service policy as a QoS
policy within a policy map, use the no form of this command.
service-policy
[ typeqos ]
policy-map-name
noservice-policy
[ typeqos ]
policy-map-name
Syntax Description
type qos
(Optional) Specifies a QoS service policy.
policy-map-name
Name of the predefined policy map to be used as a QoS policy. The name can
be a maximum of 40 alphanumeric characters.
Command Default
No service policy is specified.
Type is QoS when not specified.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.6.0
The type qos keywords were added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The service-policy (policy-map class) command
creates hierarchical service policies in policy-map class configuration mode.
This command is different from the service-policy
(interface) command used in interface configuration mode.
The child policy is the previously defined service policy that is being
associated with the class default of the parent policy-map. The new service policy using
the preexisting service policy is the parent policy.
The service-policy (policy-map class) command
has the following restrictions:
The priority
command cannot be used in the parent policy; it can only be used in the child
policy.
The bandwidth
command cannot be used in the parent policy.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to create a hierarchical service policy
in the service policy called parent:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map childRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# priorityRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map parentRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class-defaultRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# shape average 10000000RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# service-policy child
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
set atm-clp
To set the cell loss priority (CLP) bit when a policy map is configured, use the
set atm-clp command in policy map class configuration
mode. To remove a specific CLP bit setting, use the no form of this command.
setatm-clp
nosetatm-clp
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Command Default
The CLP bit is automatically set to 0 when Cisco routers convert IP
packets into ATM cells for transmission through Multiprotocol Label Switching
(MPLS)-aware ATM networks.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.4.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The set atm-clp command sets the CLP bit within
the packet. After the CLP bit is set, other QoS services such as Modified Deficit Round
Robin (MDRR) and Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) can operate on the bit
settings.
A policy map containing the set atm-clp command
can be attached as an output policy only. The set atm-clp
command does not support packets that originate from the router.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example illustrates setting the CLP bit using the
set atm-clp command in the policy map:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map c1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match precedence ipv4 0 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map atm-clp-setRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class c1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set atm-clpRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface atm 0/2/0/0.1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-subif)# pvc 10/100RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-atm-vc)# service-policy output atm-clp-setRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-atm-vc)# end
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
set cos
To set the Layer 2 class of service (CoS) value of an outgoing packet, use the
set cos command in policy map class configuration mode.
To remove a specific CoS value setting, use the no form of this command.
setcoscos-value
nosetcoscos-value
Syntax Description
cos-value
Specific IEEE 802.1Q CoS value from 0 to 7.
Command Default
No Layer 2 CoS value of an outgoing packet is set.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Use the set cos command to mark a packet that
is being sent to a switch. Switches can leverage Layer 2 header information, including a
CoS value marking.
For Layer 3, the set cos command can be used only in service
policies that are attached in the output direction of an interface. Packets entering an
interface cannot be set with a CoS value.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
In the following example, the policy map called cos-set is created to
assign different CoS values for different service classes, and then is attached to the
output Gigabit Ethernet VLAN subinterface 0/1/0/9.100.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map cos-setRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set cos 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class2RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set cos 2RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 0/1/0/9.100RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy output cos-set
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
set discard-class
To set the discard class and Quality of Service (QoS) group identifiers on IP Version 4
(IPv4) or Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) packets, use the set
discard-class command in policy map class configuration mode. To
leave the discard-class values unchanged, use the no form of this command.
setdiscard-classdiscard-class-value
nosetdiscard-classdiscard-class-value
Syntax Description
discard-class-value
Discard class ID. An integer from 0 to 7, to be marked on the packet.
Command Default
No group ID is specified.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The set discard-class command associates a
discard class ID with a packet. After the discard class and QoS group IDs are set, other QoS services such as Modified Deficit Round Robin (MDRR)
and Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) can operate on the bit settings.
Discard-class indicates the discard portion of the per hop behavior
(PHB). The set discard-class command is typically used in Pipe
mode. Discard-class is required when the input PHB marking is used to classify packets
on the output interface.
The discard-class values can be used to specify the type of traffic that
is dropped when there is congestion.
Note
Marking of the discard class and the QoS group has only local significance on a node.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to set the discard class value to 5 for
packets that match the MPLS experimental bits 1:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map cust1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match mpls experimental topmost 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy2RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class cust1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set discard-class 5RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 0/1/0/9RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy input policy2
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
set dscp
To mark a packet by setting the IP differentiated services code point (DSCP) in the type
of service (ToS) byte, use the set dscp command in policy-map
class configuration mode. To remove a previously set DSCP value, use the no form
of this command.
setdscp [tunnel] dscp-value
nosetdscp [tunnel] dscp-value
Syntax Description
tunnel
(Optional) Sets the DSCP on the outer IP header. This command is available
for IPSec in the egress direction.
dscp-value
Number from 0 to 63 that sets the DSCP value. Reserved keywords can be
specified instead of numeric values. Table 1 describes the
reserved keywords.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.8.0
The tunnel keyword is supported for QoS in a Multicast Virtual Private Network
(mVPN) enabled network that requires both conditional and unconditional
marking of DSCP bits on the tunnel header.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
After the DSCP bit is set, other quality-of-service (QoS) services can
then operate on the bit settings.
Conditional marking marks the DSCP values on the tunnel header
as a policer action. Unconditional marking marks the DSCP tunnel as a policy action.
Both conditional and unconditional markings are supported only in the ingress direction.
The network gives priority (or some type of expedited handling) to marked
traffic. Typically, you set the DSCP value at the edge of the network (or administrative
domain); data then is queued based on the DSCP value. Modified Deficit Round Robin
(MDRR) can speed up handling for high DSCP traffic at congestion points. Weighted Random
Early Detection (WRED) ensures that high DSCP traffic has lower loss rates than other
traffic during times of congestion.
Reserved keywords can be specified instead of numeric values. Table 1 describes the reserved
keywords.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
In the following example, the DSCP ToS byte is set to 8 in the policy map
called policy1. All packets that satisfy the match criteria of class1 are marked with
the DSCP value of 8. The network configuration determines how packets are marked.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router (config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set dscp 8
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
set fr-de
To change the discard eligible (DE) bit setting in the address field of a Frame Relay
frame to 1 for all traffic leaving an interface, use the set
fr-de command in policy map configuration mode. To remove the DE bit
setting, use the no form of this command.
setfr-de [fr-de-bit-value]
nosetfr-de [fr-de-bit-value]
Syntax Description
not
(Optional) Negates the specified match result.
fr-de-bit-value
(Optional) Specifies the Frame Relay DE bit. Value can be 0 or 1. Value can be 1.
Command Default
The default value is 0.
Command Modes
Policy map configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
To disable this command in a traffic policy, use the no set
fr-de command in policy map configuration mode of the traffic
policy.
If the DE bit is already set to 1, no changes are made to the frame.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to set the DE bit using the
set fr-de command in the traffic policy. The router sets
the DE bit of outbound packets belonging to the ip-precedence class.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map ip-precedenceRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match precedence 0 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map set-deRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class ip-precedenceRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set fr-de 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface serial 1/0/0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# no ip addressRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# encapsulation frame-relayRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# interface serial 1/0/0.1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-subif)# ip address 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.252RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-subif)# no ip directed-broadcastRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-subif)# service-policy output set-de
Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to one or more interfaces to specify a service policy.
set mpls experimental
To set the experimental (EXP) value of the Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) packet
topmost or imposition labels, use the set mpls experimental
command in policy map configuration mode. To leave the EXP value unchanged, use the
no form of this command.
Specifies to set the EXP value of the imposition label.
topmost
Specifies to set the EXP value of the topmost label.
exp-value
Value of the MPLS packet label. Range is 0 to 7.
Command Default
No MPLS experimental value is set
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
Added the imposition keyword and changed overall command name from set mpls experimentaltopmost to set mpls experimental.
Release 3.4.0
Added the range for the exp-value argument.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
After the MPLS experimental bits are set, other QoS services such as
Modified Deficit Round Robin (MDRR) and Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) then
operate on the bit settings.
The network gives priority (or some type of expedited handling) to the
marked traffic through the application of MDRR or WRED at points downstream in the
network. Typically, the MPLS experimental value is set at the edge of the network (or
administrative domain) and queueing is acted on it thereafter. MDRR can speed up
handling for high-priority traffic at congestion points. WRED ensures that high-priority
traffic has lower loss rates than other traffic during times of congestion.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to set the MPLS experimental to 5 for
packets that match access list 101:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 acl101RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set mpls experimental imposition 5RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface gigabitithernet 0/3/0/2RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy input policy1
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
set precedence
To set the precedence value in the IP header, use the set
precedence command in policy map class configuration mode. To leave the
precedence value unchanged, use the no form of this command.
setprecedence [tunnel] value
nosetprecedence [tunnel] value
Syntax Description
tunnel
(Optional) Sets the IP precedence on the outer IP header. This command
is available on
Layer 3 interfaces in the ingress direction.
value
Number or name that sets the precedence bits in the IP header. Range is from
0 to 7. Reserved keywords can be specified instead of numeric values. Table 1 describes the reserved keywords.
Command Default
Marking is not configured.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.8.0
The tunnel keyword is supported for QoS in a Multicast Virtual Private Network
(mVPN) enabled network that requires both conditional and unconditional
marking of precedence bits on the tunnel header.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Precedence can be set using a number or corresponding name. After IP
Precedence bits are set, other QoS services such as Modified Deficit Round Robin (MDRR)
and Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) then operate on the bit settings.
Conditional marking marks the precedence values on the
tunnel header as a policer action. Unconditional marking marks the precedence tunnel
as a policy action. Both conditional and unconditional markings are supported only in
an ingress direction. The tunnel keyword is available
on Layer 3 interfaces in the ingress direction.
The network gives priority (or some type of expedited handling) to the
marked traffic through the application of MDRR or WRED at points downstream in the
network. IP precedence can be set at the edge of the network (or administrative domain)
and have queueing act on it thereafter. MDRR can speed handling for high-precedence
traffic at congestion points. WRED ensures that high-precedence traffic has lower loss
rates than other traffic during times of congestion.
The mapping from keywords such as 0 (routine) and 1 (priority) to a
precedence value is useful only in some instances. That is, the use of the precedence
bit is evolving. You can define the meaning of a precedence value by enabling other
features that use the value. In the case of high-end Internet QoS, IP precedences can be
used to establish classes of service that do not necessarily correspond numerically to
better or worse handling in the network.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example shows how to set the IP precedence to 5
(critical) for packets that match the access control list named customer1:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match access-group ipv4 customer1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set precedence 5RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 0/1/0/9RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy output policy1
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
set qos-group
To set the quality of service (QoS) group identifiers on packets, use the
set qos-group command in policy map class configuration
mode. To leave the QoS group values unchanged, use the no form of this
command.
setqos-groupqos-group-value
nosetqos-groupqos-group-value
Syntax Description
qos-group-value
QoS group ID. An integer from 0 to 31, to be marked on the packet.
Command Default
No group ID is specified.
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The set qos-group command associates a QoS
group ID with a packet. After the QoS group ID is set, other QoS services, such as
Modified Deficit Round Robin (MDRR) and Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED), can
operate on the QoS group setting.
The QoS group setting is limited in scope to the local router.
Typically, the QoS group is set on the local router and used in conjunction with WRED or
MDRR to give differing levels of service based on the group identifier.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example sets the QoS group to 5 for packets that match
the MPLS experimental bit 1:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# class-map class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# match mpls experimental topmost 1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-cmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# set qos-group 5RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# exitRP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/7/0/0RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-if)# service-policy input policy1
Attachs a policy map to an input interface or output interface to be used as the service policy for that interface.
shape average
To shape traffic to the indicated bit rate according to the algorithm specified, use the
shape average command in policy map class configuration
mode. To remove traffic shaping, use the no form of this command.
Specifies the interface bandwidth in percentage. Values can be from 1 to
100.
rate
Average shaping rate in the specified units. Values can be from 1 to
4294967295.
For 16 kbps granularity on 2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3) line
cards, the maximum shape rate is 1.05 gbps.
units
(Optional) Units for the bandwidth. Values can be:
bps—bits per second (default)
gbps—gigabits per second
kbps—kilobits per second
mbps—megabits per second
Command Default
units: bps
Command Modes
Policy map class configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
Theunits and burst-units arguments were added.
Release 3.3.1
Minimum rate value changed from 128 kbps to 256 kbps.
Release 3.4.0
The burst-size option was removed.
Release 3.9.0
The granularity of the rates specified was changed from 64 kbps to 8
kbps.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
When you use the shape average
command, egress shaping is done at the Layer 2 level and includes the Layer 2 header in
the rate calculation. Ingress shaping is done at the Layer 3 level and does not include
the Layer 2 header in the rate calculation. Shaping is performed in multiples of
256 kbps, the minimum shaping rate.
When using this command, egress and ingress shaping is performed in
multiples of 8 kbps on the Layer 3 level.
Line card Type
Ingress Granularity
Egress Granularity
2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3)**Exceptions: 1-Port OC-48c POS ISE
4-Port OC-12c POS ISE
16 kbps64 kbps64 kbps
16 kbps64 kbps64 kbps
10 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 5)
32 kbps
32 kbps
Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+)
32 kbps
8 kbps
For shape average commands in the child policy, the reference
used for percentage parameters is relative to the maximum rate of the parent. If shaping
or policing is not configured on the parent, then the parent inherits the interface
rate.
For bundled interfaces, shape average can be configured
only as a percentage.
If you have both shape and bandwidth configured for a class, ensure
that the shape percent value is always greater than the percent value for bandwidth.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example sets traffic shaping to 50
milliseconds:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# shape average percent 50
The following example shows how to set traffic shaping to
5,000,000 kbps:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config)# policy-map policy1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap)# class class1RP/0/0/CPU0:router(config-pmap-c)# shape average 5000000 kbps
show controllers egressq enaq location
To display information about QoS queue fragmentation on a node, use the show controllers
egressq enaq location command in EXEC mode.
showcontrollersegressqenaqlocationnode-id
Syntax Description
node-id
Specifies the node in the rack/slot/module
notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
When policies are frequently added and removed in large-scale
configurations, the line card might not have enough free contiguous QoS queues to
accommodate a new policy—even though there are enough free queues on the line card. Use
this command to determine the number of occupied (used/enabled) QoS queues on a node and
to see where the fragments are.
QoS queues are automatically defragmented unless the
hw-module qos queue-auto-defrag disable location command
is configured. You can manually defragment QoS queues using the hw-module
queue-defrag location command.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
interface
read
drivers
read
Examples
The following example displays information about QoS queue
fragmentation on location 0/1/CPU0. There are 12 enabled (occupied/used) QoS queues on
the node. Between queue number 7 and queue number 12, there is a gap; this is a fragment
of four unoccupied queues.
There are 4096 QoS queues on 2.5 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 3)
line cards and 8192 QoS queues on 10 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 5) line cards. For
the purpose of this example, if there were 16 total queues on this line card and a new
policy needed five free contiguous queues, the system would display an error because
there are only four free contiguous queues.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show controllers egressq enaq location 0/1/CPU0
Wed Oct 7 21:57:34.531 eastern
Total enabled queues:12
Total allocated ports:5
Queue# Head Tail Length Threshold Type Red avg Port/Slot
pkts index
===========================================================================
0 0 0 0 63 oq 0 0
1 0 0 0 63 oq 0 0
2 0 0 0 63 oq 0 1
3 0 0 0 63 oq 0 1
4 0 0 0 63 oq 0 2
5 0 0 0 63 oq 0 2
6 0 0 0 63 oq 0 3
7 0 0 0 63 oq 0 3
12 0 0 0 63 oq 0 5
13 0 0 0 1 oq 0 5
14 0 0 0 63 oq 0 5
15 0 0 0 63 oq 0 5
The following example displays information for the same node after it
has been defragmented.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show controllers egressq enaq location 0/1/CPU0
Wed Oct 7 22:04:45.420 eastern
Total enabled queues:12
Total allocated ports:5
Queue# Head Tail Length Threshold Type Red avg Port/Slot
pkts index
===========================================================================
0 0 0 0 63 oq 0 0
1 0 0 0 63 oq 0 0
2 0 0 0 63 oq 0 1
3 0 0 0 63 oq 0 1
4 0 0 0 63 oq 0 2
5 0 0 0 63 oq 0 2
6 0 0 0 63 oq 0 3
7 0 0 0 63 oq 0 3
8 0 0 0 63 oq 0 5
9 0 0 0 1 oq 0 5
10 0 0 0 63 oq 0 5
11 0 0 0 63 oq 0 5
Displays sanity checking configuration for a designated node.
node-id
Node for which sanity checking information is to be displayed. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
This command is supported on 10 Gbps IP Services Engine (Engine 5) line
cards and Multirate 10G IP Services Engines (Engine 5+) line cards only.
Task ID
Task ID
Operation
sonet-sdh OR
dwdm OR
interface
read
read
read
drivers
read
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to display information on the
sanity checking of the ingress queueing ASIC on location 0/2/CPU0:
(Optional) Displays multicast QoS group information.
port
(Optional) Port number. Range is from 0 to 15.
locationnode-id
(Optional) Specifies multicast QoS group information for a designated node.
The node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
queue-info
(Optional) Displays multicast QoS group queue information.
type
(Optional) Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?)
online help function.
instance
(Optional) Either a physical interface instance or a virtual interface
instance:
Physical interface instance.
Naming notation is rack/slot/module/port and a
slash between values is required as part of the notation.
rack: Chassis number of the rack.
slot: Physical slot number of the line
card.
module: Module number. A physical
layer interface module (PLIM) is always 0.
port: Physical port number of the
interface.
Note
In references to a Management Ethernet interface located on a Route
Processor card, the physical slot number is alphanumeric (RP0 or
RP1) and the module is CPU0. Example: interface
MgmtEth0/RP1/CPU0/0.
Virtual interface instance.
Number range varies depending on interface type.
For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark
(?) online help function.
wred
(Optional) Displays multicast QoS Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED)
information.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
Command syntax was changed from show hw-module qos multicast to show hw-module multicast qos.
Release 3.6.0
The wred keyword was added.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
If you do not enter a node-id argument, all
configured interfaces are displayed.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
multicast
read
Examples
The following sample output shows how to display QoS information about
for Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) interface 0/7/0/3:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show hw-module multicast qos
POS 0/7/0/3 output: p1
Class c1
Matched (packets/bytes) : 0/0
Marked (packets/bytes) : 0/0
The following table describes
the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 4 show hw-module multicast qos Field Descriptions
Field
Description
POS 0/7/0/3 output: p1
POS output interface for policy p1.
Matched (packets/bytes): 0/0
Class c1 of policy p1 displays no matched packets and bytes.
Marked (packets/bytes): 0/0
Class c1 of policy p1 displays no marked packets and bytes.
Matched (packets/bytes): 10/1320
Class c2 of policy p1 displays 10 matched packets and 1320 matched
bytes.
Enables multicast egress quality of service (QoS) on a node.
show policy-map interface
To display policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service
policies on the specified interface, use the show policy-map
interface command in EXEC mode.
Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help
function.
interface-path-id
Physical interface instance. Naming notation is rack/slot/module/port and a slash between values is required as part of the notation.
rack—Chassis number of the rack.
slot—Physical slot number of the line
card.
module—Module number. A physical layer
interface module (PLIM) is always 0.
port—Physical port number of the
interface.
Note
In references to a Management Ethernet interface located on a route
processor card, the physical slot number is alphanumeric (RP0 or RP1) and
the module is CPU0.
Example: interface MgmtEth0/RP1/CPU0/0.
For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark
(?) online help function.
input
(Optional) Displays per class statistics on inbound traffic for the
specified policy map and interface.
output
(Optional) Displays per class statistics on outbound traffic for the
specified policy map and interface.
member
(Optional) Specifies the bundle member’s interface.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.3.0
The combined, hw, and sw keywords were added.
Release 3.4.0
The combined, hw, and sw keywords were deleted.
The pre-decrypt, post-decrypt, pre-encrypt, and post-encrypt keywords were added.
Release 3.4.1
The combined, hw, and sw keywords were added.
Release 3.5.0
The show policy-map interface command output was updated to show when a policy is suspended on a
multilink or T3 interface.
The pre-decrypt, post-decrypt, post-encrypt, and pre-decrypt keywords were removed.
Release 3.6.0
The combined, hw, and sw keywords were removed.
The membertype interface-path-id keyword and arguments were added.
Release 3.9.0
The show policy-map interface command output was updated to show IPHC statistics.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The show policy-map interface command
displays the statistics for classes in the service policy attached to an interface.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read
Examples
The following sample output shows how to display policy statistics
information for all classes on the TenGigE interface 0/6/1/0 that are in the output and
input direction:
The following sample output shows how to display policy
statistics information for all classes on the Serial interface 0/0/3/0/3:0 that are in
the output direction:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show policy-map interface Serial0/0/3/0/3:0 output
show policy-map int Serial0/0/3/0/3:0 output
Mon May 18 22:06:14.698 UTC
Serial0/0/3/0/3:0 output: p1
Class class-default
Classification statistics (packets/bytes) (rate - kbps)
Matched : 0/0 0
Transmitted : 0/0 0
Total Dropped : 0/0 0
Queueing statistics
Queue ID : 0
High watermark (Unknown) : 0
Inst-queue-len (packets) : 0
Avg-queue-len (packets) : 0
Taildropped(packets/bytes) : 0/0
Compression Statistics
Header ip rtp
Sent Total (packets) : 880
Sent Compressed (packets) : 877
Sent full header (packets) : 342
Saved (bytes) : 31570
Sent (bytes) : 24750
Efficiency improvement factor : 2.27
Note
In Classification Statistics, the total dropped packets are calculated based on the
total number of policed-dropped packets and the queueing tail dropped packets.
Currently, for ATM interfaces in the egress direction, the queueing tail dropped
packets are not added to the classification total dropped packets.
The following table describes
the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 5 show policy-map interface Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Classification statistics
Matched
Number of packets or bytes that matched this class.
Transmitted
Number of packets or bytes transmitted for this class.
Total Dropped
Number of packets or bytes dropped for this class.
Policing statistics
Policed(conform)
Number of packets or bytes that conformed to the police rate for this
class.
Policed(exceed)
Number of packets or bytes that exceeded the police rate for this
class.
Policed(violate)
Number of packets or bytes that violated the police rate for this
class.
Policed and dropped
Number of packets or bytes dropped by the policer of this class.
Queueing statistics
Queue ID
Queue number of the packet in this class.
High watermark (bytes)/(ms)
Maximum length of the queue.
Inst-queue-len (bytes)/(ms)
Instantaneous length of the queue.
Avg-queue-len (bytes)/(ms)
Average length of the queue.
Taildropped (bytes)
Number of bytes taildropped for this queue.
Compression Statistics
Sent Total
Total number of packets sent.
Sent Compressed
Number of compressed packets sent.
Sent full header
Number of packets sent with a full header.
Saved
Number of bytes saved.
Sent
Number of bytes sent.
Efficiency improvement factor
Ratio of the packet’s original full size to the packet’s compressed
size.
The following example shows sample output shows when a policy has
been suspended on a multilink interface:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show policy-map interface Multilink 0/2/0/0/201 input
Multilink0/2/0/0/201 input: ps1 suspended by EA: No bandwidth
show policy-map targets
To display information about the interfaces on which policy maps are applied, use the
show policy-map targets command in EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays information about the interfaces on which policy maps
are applied for the specified location. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
pmap-name name
(Optional) Displays information about the interfaces on which the specified
policy map is applied.
type performance-traffic
(Optional) Displays information about the interfaces on which Realtime
Application Flow Monitoring policy maps are applied.
type qos
(Optional) Displays information about the interfaces on which QoS policy
maps are applied. This is the default type.
Command Default
The default QoS policy type is QoS.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For a short period of time while a QoS policy is being
modified, no QoS policy is active on the interface. For these reasons, modify QoS
policies that affect the fewest number of interfaces at a time. Use the show
policy-map targets command to identify the number of interfaces that
will be affected during policy map modification.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read
Examples
In this example, the Gigabit Ethernet interface 0/1/0/0 has one policy
map attached as a main policy. Outgoing traffic on this interface will be affected if
the policy is modified:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show policy-map targets
Fri Jul 16 16:38:24.789 DST
1) Policymap: policy1 Type: qos
Targets (applied as main policy):
GigabitEthernet0/1/0/0 output
Total targets: 1
Targets (applied as child policy):
Total targets: 0
Displays policy configuration information for all classes configured for all service policies on the specified interface.
show qos acl-deny enable
To display the acl-deny information for a particular location, use the show
qos acl-deny enable command in the root configuration mode. To
disable this functionality, use the no form of this command.
showqosacl-denyenable
[ locationnode-id ]
noshowqosacl-denyenable
[ locationnode-id ]
Syntax Description
locationnode-id
Displays the acl-deny function on a node. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Root configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.6.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
This command displays the administration and operational states of the
acl-deny function. The operational state dictates the current operational behavior while
the administration state dictates the operational state after the next line card (LC)
reload.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos-ea
write
Examples
The following example shows how to display an acl-deny function on
0/0/CPU0:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# F14-01RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show qos acl-deny location 0/0/CPU0
show qos if-ref-bw
To display the Quality of Service (QoS) reference bandwidth, use the show
qos if-ref-bw command in EXEC mode.
showqosif-ref-bwlocationnode-id
Syntax Description
location
Configures node for which the QoS reference bandwidth is to be
displayed.
node-id
Node for which the reference bandwidth is to be displayed. The node-id
argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 4.0.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The QoS reference bandwidth is used for the conversion of time based
values to equivalent packet based interpretation.
Task ID
Task ID
Operation
qos
read
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to display the QoS reference
bandwidth on location 0/2/CPU0. In this example, the command output indicates that the
interface reference bandwidth has been enabled as the QoS reference bandwidth:
Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help
function.
interface-path-id
Either a physical interface instance or a virtual interface instance as
follows:
Physical interface instance.
Naming notation is rack/slot/module/port and a
slash between values is required as part of the notation.
rack: Chassis number of the rack.
slot: Physical slot number of the
modular services card or line card.
module: Module number. A physical
layer interface module (PLIM) is always 0.
port: Physical port number of the
interface.
Note
In references to a Management Ethernet interface located on a
route processor card, the physical slot number is alphanumeric
(RSP0RP0 or RP1) and the module is CPU0. Example: interface MgmtEth0/RSP0RP1/CPU0/0.
Virtual interface instance.
Number range varies depending on interface type.
For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark
(?) online help function.
input
Attaches the specified policy map to the input interface.
output
Attaches the specified policy map to the output interface.
locationnode-id
(Optional) Displays detailed QoS information for the designated node. The
node-id argument is entered in the
rack/slot/module notation.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.2
This command was introduced.
Release 3.4.0
The pre-decrypt, post-decrypt, pre-encrypt, and post-encrypt keywords were added for IPSec.
Release 3.5.0
The show qos interface command output was updated to show when a policy is suspended on a
multilink or T3 interface.
The pre-decrypt, post-decrypt, post-encrypt, and pre-decrypt keywords were removed.
Release 3.6.0
The command output now includes the following:
User-configured values are shown in parentheses.
Guaranteed service rate value.
Weight for each class.
Release 3.9.0
Updated to support three-level hierarchical policy maps.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The show qos interface command displays
configuration for all classes in the service policy that is attached to an
interface.
Use this command to check the actual values programmed in the hardware
from the action keywords in the police rate command.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read
Examples
The following sample output shows the L2VPN QoS information on
a GigabitEthernet interface:
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show qos interface GigabitEthernet 0/2/0/0 output
NOTE:- Configured values are displayed within parentheses
Interface GigE0_2_0_0 -- output policy
Total number of classes: 3
-------------------------------------------------------
Level1 class = c1
Egressq Queue ID = 25 (LP queue)
Queue belongs to Group = 9
Queue Max. BW. = 999936 kbps (10 %)
Queue Min. BW. = 0 kbps (default)
Weight = 10 (BWR not configured)
Shaper burst = 31248 bytes
Guaranteed service rate = 1000000 kbps
TailDrop Threshold = 12500000 bytes / 100 ms (default)
Policer not configured for this class
WRED not configured for this class
Level1 class = c2
Egressq Queue ID = 26 (LP queue)
Queue belongs to Group = 9
Queue Max. BW. = 10000128 kbps (default)
Queue Min. BW. = 2000128 kbps (20 %)
Weight = 10 (BWR not configured)
Guaranteed service rate = 4666666 kbps
TailDrop Threshold = 58333325 bytes / 100 ms (default)
Policer not configured for this class
WRED not configured for this class
Level1 class = class-default
Egressq Queue ID = 9 (Group default LP queue)
Queue belongs to Group = 9
Queue Max. BW. = 10000128 kbps (default)
Queue Min. BW. = 0 kbps (default)
Weight = 10 (BWR not configured)
Guaranteed service rate = 1000000 kbps
TailDrop Threshold = 12500000 bytes / 100 ms (default)
Policer slot # = 224
Policer committed rate = 1000000 kbps (10 %)
Policer conform burst = 2097120 bytes (default)
Policer conform action = Just TX
Policer exceed action = DROP PKT
WRED not configured for this class
The following table describes the
significant fields shown in the display.
Table 7 show QoS interface Field Descriptions
Field
Description
LEVEL1 class
Level 1 class identifier in hexadecimal format.
class name
Name that was assigned to this class with the
class command.
Queue ID
Queue identifier.
Queue Min. BW
Minimum bandwidth allowed on this queue.
Queue Max. BW
Maximum bandwidth allowed on this queue.
Queue Max. Burst
Maximum burst size allowed on this queue.
Weight
Weight assigned to the specified class.
If no weight has been assigned, the show policy-map
interface command output shows “No explicit weight
assigned for this class.”
Queue Limit
Configured queue limit.
Policer average
Average Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bits per second (bps),
gigabits per second (gbps), kilobits per second (KBits), or megabits per
second (mbps).
Policer conform burst
Configured burst size, expressed in bytes, gigabytes (GB), kilobytes
(KB), megabytes (MB), milliseconds (ms), or microseconds (us).
Policer excess burst
Programmed burst size for conforming cells, expressed in bytes, gigabytes
(GB), kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), milliseconds (ms), or microseconds
(us).
Policer conform action
Policer conform action.
Policer exceed action
Policer exceed action.
Policer violate
Indicates whether the device supports excess burst size configuration. In
the example, excess burst size configuration is supported for transmitted
cells only.
Policer exceed action value
Policer exceed action value.
Policer violate action
Policer violate action.
The following example shows a sample display of three-level QoS
policy configuration information on a GigabitEthernet interface.
RP/0/0/CPU0:router# show qos interface gigabitethernet 0/0/0/0 output
Interface GigabitEthernet0_0_0_0 -- Direction: output
Policy : 3level-p
Total number of classes: 5
--------------------------------------------------------
LEVEL1 class: classid = 0x1
class name = class-default
Queue Max. BW. = 20 mbits/sec (19968 kbps)
LEVEL2 class: classid = 0x2
class name = prec1
queue ID = 6
port ID = 0
Queue Max. BW. = 10 mbits/sec (9984 kbps)
Queue Limit = 1024 packets (1024 pkts)
LEVEL3 class: classid = 0x3
class name = qosgrp2
Policer average = 3 mbits/sec (3008 kbps)
Policer conform action = Just TX
Policer exceed action = DROP PKT
LEVEL3 class: classid = 0x4
class name = class-default
Policer average = 2 mbits/sec (2000 kbps)
Policer conform action = Just TX
Policer exceed action = DROP PKT
LEVEL2 class: classid = 0x5
class name = class-default
queue ID = 7
port ID = 0
Weight = 1
Queue Limit = 1024 packets (1024 pkts)
The following table describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 8 show QoS interface Field Descriptions (three-level policy)
Field
Description
LEVEL1 class
Level 1 class identifier in hexadecimal format.
LEVEL2 class
Level 2 class identifier in hexadecimal format.
LEVEL3 class
Level 3 class identifier in hexadecimal format.
class name
Name that was assigned to this class with the
class command.
Queue ID
Queue identifier.
Queue Min. BW
Minimum bandwidth allowed on this queue.
Queue Max. BW
Maximum bandwidth allowed on this queue.
Queue Max. Burst
Maximum burst size allowed on this queue.
Weight
Weight assigned to the specified class.
If no weight has been assigned, the show policy-map
interface command output shows “No explicit weight
assigned for this class.”
Queue Limit
Configured queue limit.
Policer average
Average Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bits per second (bps),
gigabits per second (gbps), kilobits per second (KBits), or megabits per
second (mbps).
Policer conform burst
Configured burst size, expressed in bytes, gigabytes (GB), kilobytes
(KB), megabytes (MB), milliseconds (ms), or microseconds (us).
Policer excess burst
Programmed burst size for conforming cells, expressed in bytes, gigabytes
(GB), kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), milliseconds (ms), or microseconds
(us).
Policer conform action
Policer conform action.
Policer exceed action
Policer exceed action.
Policer violate
Indicates whether the device supports excess burst size configuration. In
the example, excess burst size configuration is supported for transmitted
cells only.
Policer exceed action value
Policer exceed action value.
Policer violate action
Policer violate action.
show qos pol-gran location
To display policer granularity for a SPA Interface Processor, use the show
qos pol-gran location command in EXEC mode.
showqospol-granlocationinterface-path-id
Syntax Description
interface-path-id
Physical location of the Shared Interface Processor (SIP). Naming notation
is rack/slot/module and a slash between values is
required as part of the notation.
rack—Chassis number of the rack.
slot—Physical slot number of the modular
services card or line card.
module—Module number. A physical layer
interface module (PLIM) is always 0.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.8.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
The show qos interface command displays
policer granularity for a SPA Interface Processor and all of its installed SPAs. Use
this command to verify the policer granularity configured using the
hw-module qos pol-gran location command.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read
Examples
The following sample output shows the configured (8 kbps) and default
(64 kbps) policer granularity for the SIP at location 0/1/CPU0:
To configure a service policy for the switch fabric, use the switch-fabric
service-policy command in global configuration mode. To remove a
specified service policy from the switch fabric, use the no form of this command.
switch-fabricservice-policypolicy-map-name
noswitch-fabricservice-policypolicy-map-name
Syntax Description
policy-map-name
Name of the predefined policy map to be used as a QoS policy. The name can
be a maximum of 40 alphanumeric characters.
Command Default
No service policy is specified.
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.3.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
The following example configures the service policy for policy
map1.
To configure the action to take on packets that violate the rate limit, use the
violate-action command in policy map police
configuration mode. To remove a conform action from the policy-map, use the no
form of this command.
violate-actiondrop
noviolate-actiondrop
Syntax Description
drop
Drops the packet.
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Policy map police configuration
Command History
Release
Modification
Release 3.4.0
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.
For more information regarding the traffic policing feature refer to
the police rate command.
The violate-action command can set the DSCP,
the precedence, or the discard class for IP packets, and experimental and discard-class
values for MPLS packets.
Task ID
Task ID
Operations
qos
read, write
Examples
In the following example for MPLS, traffic policing is configured to
drop packets that violate the rate limit: