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Creating policies – NETGEAR MS510TXPP 8 Port Gigabit PoE Managed Switch User Manual

Page 340

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Smart Managed Pro Switches MS510TX and MS510TXPP

Configuration Examples

User Manual

340

Address-based

You can combine these classifiers with logical AND or OR operations to build complex
MF-classifiers (by specifying a class type of

all

or

any

, respectively). That is, within a single

class, multiple match criteria are grouped together as an AND expression or a sequential OR
expression, depending on the defined class type. Only classes of the same type can be
nested; class nesting does not allow for the negation (

exclude

option) of the referenced class.

To configure DiffServ, you must define service levels, namely the forwarding classes/PHBs
identified by a given DSCP value, on the egress interface. You define these service levels by
configuring BA classes for each.

Creating Policies

Use DiffServ policies to associate a collection of classes that you configure with one or more
QoS policy statements. The result of this association is referred to as a policy.

From a DiffServ perspective, two types of policies exist:

Traffic Conditioning Policy

. A policy applied to a DiffServ traffic class

Service Provisioning Policy

. A policy applied to a DiffServ service level

You must manually configure the various statements and rules used in the traffic conditioning
and service provisioning policies to achieve the desired Traffic Conditioning Specification
(TCS) and the Service Level Specification (SLS) operation, respectively.

Traffic Conditioning Policy

Traffic conditioning pertains to actions performed on incoming traffic. Several distinct QoS
actions are associated with traffic conditioning:

Dropping

. Drops a packet upon arrival. This is useful for emulating access control list

operation using DiffServ, especially when DiffServ and ACL cannot coexist on the same
interface.

Marking IP DSCP

. Marks or remarks the DiffServ code point in a packet with the DSCP

value representing the service level associated with a particular DiffServ traffic class.

Marking CoS (802.1p)

. Sets the 3-bit priority field in the first/only 802.1p header to a

specified value when packets are transmitted for the traffic class. An 802.1p header is
inserted if it does not already exist. This is useful for assigning a Layer 2 priority level
based on a DiffServ forwarding class (such as the DSCP or IP precedence value)
definition to convey some QoS characteristics to downstream switches that do not
routinely look at the DSCP value in the IP header.

Policing

. A method of constraining incoming traffic associated with a particular class so

that it conforms to the terms of the TCS. Special treatment can be applied to out-of-profile
packets that are either in excess of the conformance specification or are nonconformant.
The DiffServ feature supports the following types of traffic policing treatments (actions):

Drop

. The packet is dropped.

Mark CoS

. The 802.1p user priority bits are marked or remarked and forwarded.