Netgear GSM7312 FSM7326P Command line reference manual - Page 218

policy-map

Page 218 highlights

Command Line Interface Reference for the ProSafe 7300 Series Layer-3 Switches, Software Ver- Use the policy commands to associate a traffic class that you define by using the class command set with one or more QoS policy attributes. Assign the class/policy association to an interface to form a service. Specify the policy name when you create the policy. Each traffic class defines a particular treatment for packets that match the class definition. You can associate multiple traffic classes with a single policy. When a packet satisfies the conditions of more than one class, preference is based on the order in which you add the classes to the policy. The first class you add has the highest precedence. This set of commands consists of policy creation/deletion, class addition/removal, and individual policy attributes. Note: The only way to remove an individual policy attribute from a class instance within a policy is to remove the class instance and re-add it to the policy. The values associated with an existing policy attribute can be changed without removing the class instance. The CLI command root is policy-map. To enter "Config-policy-map" mode, use the policy-map in command from Global Config mode. To enter "Config-policy-classmap" mode, use the class command from "Config-policy-map" mode. 13.4.1 policy-map This command establishes a new DiffServ policy. The parameter is a casesensitive alphanumeric string from 1 to 31 characters uniquely identifying the policy. The type of policy is specific to the inbound traffic direction as indicated by the in parameter. Note: The policy type dictates which of the individual policy attribute commands are valid within the policy definition. 13-18 Note: The CLI mode is changed to Policy-Map Config when this command is successfully executed. Format Mode policy-map in Global Config Quality of Service (QoS) Commands v1.0, February 2007

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Command Line Interface Reference for the ProSafe 7300 Series Layer-3 Switches, Software Ver-
13-18
Quality of Service (QoS) Commands
v1.0, February 2007
Use the policy commands to associate a traffic class that you define by using the class
command set with one or more QoS policy attributes. Assign the class/policy association
to an interface to form a service. Specify the policy name when you create the policy.
Each traffic class defines a particular treatment for packets that match the class definition.
You can associate multiple traffic classes with a single policy. When a packet satisfies the
conditions of more than one class, preference is based on the order in which you add the
classes to the policy. The first class you add has the highest precedence.
This set of commands consists of policy creation/deletion, class addition/removal, and
individual policy attributes.
The CLI command root is
policy-map
.
To enter “Config-policy-map” mode, use the
policy-map <
policy-name
> in
command
from Global Config mode.
To enter “Config-policy-classmap” mode, use the
class <
class-name
>
command from
“Config-policy-map” mode.
13.4.1 policy-map
This command establishes a new DiffServ policy. The
<policyname
>
parameter is a case-
sensitive alphanumeric string from 1 to 31 characters uniquely identifying the policy. The
type of policy is specific to the inbound traffic direction as indicated by the in parameter.
Format
policy-map
<policyname>
in
Mode
Global Config
Note:
The only way to remove an individual policy attribute from a class instance
within a policy is to remove the class instance and re-add it to the policy.
The values associated with an existing policy attribute can be changed
without removing the class instance.
Note:
The policy type dictates which of the individual policy attribute commands
are valid within the policy definition.
Note:
The CLI mode is changed to Policy-Map Config when this command is
successfully executed.