Dell PowerConnect 6024 Command Line Interface (CLI) Guide (.htm) - Page 311
police, policy-map, class, access-group
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characteristics to the specified policy-map, and to modify the match criteria within the classmap by using the access-group option. If a new class-map name is used, it is automatically created, but then the access-group must be created. Example The following example defines a traffic classification named "class1" with an access-group called "dell". The class is in a policy map called "policy1". Console (config)# policy-map policy1 Console (config-pmap)# class class1 access-group dell police The police policy-map class configuration command defines a policer for classified traffic. To remove an existing policer, use the no form of this command. Syntax police committed-rate-kbps committed-burst-byte [exceed-action {drop | policed-dscptransmit }] no police • committed-rate-kbps-The average traffic rate (CIR) in kilo bits per second(bps). • committed-burst-byte-The normal burst size (CBS) in bytes. • exceed-action drop-Specifies action taken when the rate is exceed, which is to drop the packet. • exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit-Specifies the action taken when the rate is exceeded, which is to remark the DSCP of the packet according to policed-DSCP map. Default Configuration This command has no default configuration. Command Mode Policy-map Class Configuration mode User Guidelines Policing uses a token bucket algorithm. CIR represents how fast the token is removed from the bucket. CBS represents the depth of the bucket. QoS Commands 311