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Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Command Reference

OL-13271-03

Chapter 2 Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Cisco IOS Commands

match (class-map configuration)

If you enter the class-map {match-all | match-any} class-map-name global configuration command,
you can enter these match commands:

match access-group acl-name

Note

The ACL must be an extended named ACL.

match input-interface interface-id-list

match ip dscp dscp-list

match ip precedence ip-precedence-list

You cannot enter the match access-group acl-index command.

To define packet classification on a physical-port basis, only one match command per class map is
supported. In this situation, the match-all and match-any keywords are equivalent.

For the match ip dscp dscp-list or the match ip precedence ip-precedence-list command, you can enter
a mnemonic name for a commonly used value. For example, you can enter the match ip dscp af11
command, which is the same as entering the match ip dscp 10 command. You can enter the match ip
precedence critical
command, which is the same as entering the match ip precedence 5 command. For
a list of supported mnemonics, enter the match ip dscp ? or the match ip precedence ? command to
see the command-line help strings.

Use the input-interface interface-id-list keyword when you are configuring an interface-level class map
in a hierarchical policy map. For the interface-id-list, you can specify up to six entries.

Examples

This example shows how to create a class map called class2, which matches all the incoming traffic with
DSCP values of 10, 11, and 12:

Switch(config)# class-map class2

Switch(config-cmap)# match ip dscp 10 11 12

Switch(config-cmap)# exit

This example shows how to create a class map called class3, which matches all the incoming traffic with
IP-precedence values of 5, 6, and 7:

Switch(config)# class-map class3

Switch(config-cmap)# match ip precedence 5 6 7

Switch(config-cmap)# exit

This example shows how to delete the IP-precedence match criteria and to classify traffic using acl1:

Switch(config)# class-map class2

Switch(config-cmap)# match ip precedence 5 6 7

Switch(config-cmap)# no match ip precedence

Switch(config-cmap)# match access-group acl1

Switch(config-cmap)# exit

This example shows how to specify a list of physical ports to which an interface-level class map in a
hierarchical policy map applies:

Switch(config)# class-map match-all class4

Switch(config-cmap)# match input-interface gigabitethernet2/0/1 gigabitethernet2/0/2

Switch(config-cmap)# exit