HP 6125XLG R2306-HP 6125XLG Blade Switch ACL and QoS Configuration Guide - Page 25

Defining a traffic behavior, Defining a QoS policy

Page 25 highlights

Option service-vlan-id vlan-id-list source-mac mac-address Description Matches the service provider VLAN IDs (SVLANs). The vlan-id-list argument is in the format of vlan-id-list = { vlan-id | vlan-id1 to vlan-id2 }&, where the vlan-id, vlan-id1, and vlan-id2 arguments represent the VLAN IDs and each are in the range of 1 to 4094, vlan-id1 must be no greater than vlan-id2, and & indicates that you can specify up to 10 VLAN IDs or VLAN ID ranges. Matches a source MAC address. Defining a traffic behavior A traffic behavior is a set of QoS actions (such as traffic filtering, shaping, policing, and priority marking) to take on a traffic class of traffic. To define a traffic behavior: Step 1. Enter system view. Command system-view 2. Create a traffic behavior and enter traffic behavior view. traffic behavior behavior-name See the subsequent chapters, 3. Configure actions in the traffic depending on the purpose of the behavior. traffic behavior: traffic policing, traffic filtering, priority marking, traffic accounting, and so on. Remarks N/A By default, no traffic behavior is configured. By default, no action is configured for a traffic behavior. Defining a QoS policy You associate a traffic behavior with a traffic class in a QoS policy to perform the actions that are defined in the traffic behavior for the traffic class of packets. When an ACL is referenced by a QoS policy for traffic classification, the action (permit or deny) in the ACL is ignored, and the actions in the associated traffic behavior are performed. To associate a traffic class with a traffic behavior in a QoS policy: Step 1. Enter system view. 2. Create a QoS policy and enter QoS policy view. Command system-view qos policy policy-name Remarks N/A By default, no QoS policy is configured. 19

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19
Option
Description
service-vlan-id
vlan-id-list
Matches the service provider VLAN IDs (SVLANs).
The
vlan-id-list
argument is in the format of
vlan-id-list
= {
vlan-id
|
vlan-id1
to
vlan-id2
}&<1-10>, where the
vlan-id, vlan-id1,
and
vlan-id2
arguments
represent the VLAN IDs and each are in the range of 1 to 4094,
vlan-id1
must be no greater than
vlan-id2
, and &<1-10>
indicates that you can
specify up to 10 VLAN IDs or VLAN ID ranges.
source-mac
mac-address
Matches a source MAC address.
Defining a traffic behavior
A traffic behavior is a set of QoS actions (such as traffic filtering, shaping, policing, and priority marking)
to take on a traffic class of traffic.
To define a traffic behavior:
Step
Command
Remarks
1.
Enter system view.
system-view
N/A
2.
Create a traffic behavior and
enter traffic behavior view.
traffic behavior
behavior-name
By default, no traffic behavior is
configured.
3.
Configure actions in the traffic
behavior.
See the subsequent chapters,
depending on the purpose of the
traffic behavior: traffic policing,
traffic filtering, priority marking,
traffic accounting, and so on.
By default, no action is configured
for a traffic behavior.
Defining a QoS policy
You associate a traffic behavior with a traffic class in a QoS policy to perform the actions that are defined
in the traffic behavior for the traffic class of packets.
When an ACL is referenced by a QoS policy for traffic classification, the action (permit or deny) in the
ACL is ignored, and the actions in the associated traffic behavior are performed.
To associate a traffic class with a traffic behavior in a QoS policy:
Step
Command
Remarks
1.
Enter system view.
system-view
N/A
2.
Create a QoS policy and
enter QoS policy view.
qos policy
policy-name
By default, no QoS policy is
configured.