Q
UALITY
OF
S
ERVICE
C
OMMANDS
34-10
Example
This example creates a policy called “rd_policy,” uses the class command
to specify the previously defined “rd_class,” uses the set command to
classify the service that incoming packets will receive, and then uses the
police command to limit the average bandwidth to 100,000 Kbps, the
burst rate to 1522 bytes, and configure the response to drop any violati ng
packets.
service-policy
This command applies a policy map defined by the policy-map command
to the ingress queue of a particular interface. Use the no form to remove
the policy map from this interface.
Syntax
[
no
]
service-policy
input
policy-map-name
input
- Apply to the input traffic.
policy-map-name
- Name of the policy map for this interface.
(Range: 1-16 characters)
Default Setting
No policy map is attached to an interface.
Command Mode
Interface Configuration (Ethernet, Port Channel)
Command Usage
You can only assign one policy map to an interface.
You must first define a class map, then define a policy map, and finally
use the service-policy command to bind the policy map to the
required interface.
Console(config)#policy-map rd_policy
Console(config-pmap)#class rd_class
Console(config-pmap-c)#set ip dscp 3
Console(config-pmap-c)#police 100000 1522 exceed-action drop
Console(config-pmap-c)#