Chapter 6 Bandwidth Management

Source port: Any

Source address: Any

Destination address: Any

Destination port: Any

Protocol: Any.

ras> bm filter wlan add 1 service ftp 172.16.1.208 0 0 0 0 0 Filter setting is done.

ras> bm show filter wlan 1

===============================================================================

Class 1

Class Note:

WLAN-class1

 

Filter Enabled:

Yes

 

Destination(A : P):

(172.16.1.208 : 0)

 

Destination Netmask:

255.255.255.255

 

Source(A : P):

(0.0.0.0 : 0)

 

Source Netmask:

0.0.0.0

 

Protocol:

0

 

Special for Service:

FTP

===============================================================================

This example monitors the runtime situation for all WAN classes.

Each interface has one root class (0) and one default class (99). In this example, you can see only one user-defined class (1). The root class (0) displays total traffic amount for the WLAN interface. You can see the current bandwidth usage matching the class 1 rule is 0 b. The default class (99) includes the bandwidth usage for traffic that doesn't match any user-defined class rules. 97 and 98 are classes for automatically classified traffic.

ras> bm

monitor wlan

 

 

 

 

 

 

ras>

0:

14Kb

1:

0b

97:

6Kb

98:

8Kb

wlan -

wlan -

99:

0b

1:

0b

97:

3Kb

98:

0b

0:

3Kb

wlan -

99:

448b

1:

0b

97:

3Kb

98:

0b

0:

3Kb

wlan -

99:

0b

1:

0b

97:

2Kb

98:

0b

0:

2Kb

ras>

99:

448bbm monitor wlan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

44

 

DSL & IAD CLI Reference Guide