13-19
Cisco 10000 Series Router Quality of Service Configuration Guide
OL-7433-09
Chapter 13 Defining QoS for Multiple Policy Levels
Configuring QoS for Multiple Queues
Example 13-6
shows how to configure a top-level parent policy using the middle-level child policy
configured in
Example 13-5
. In this top-level policy, the
shape
command indicates a total transmission
capacity of 64,000 kbps for the combined queues. The
service-policy
command applies the middle-level
policy named Southwest to the parent class-default class.
Example 13-6 Configuring a Top-Level Parent Policy of a Three-Level Hierarchy
Router(config-pmap)#
policy-map Region1
Router(config-pmap)#
class class-default
Router(config-pmap-c)#
shape 64000
Router(config-pmap-c)#
service-policy Southwest
Router(config-pmap-c)#
exit
Router(config-pmap)#
exit
Router(config)#
Policing Inbound Traffic at Two Levels of Hierarchy
To police the traffic the router accepts on an inbound interface with a service policy applied, enter the
following commands beginning in global configuration mode:
Note
Use the following commands to configure both the child and parent policies. Configure the bottom-level
child policy first and then the top-level parent policy. For information about additional actions you can
specify, see the
“Types of QoS Actions” section on page 3-4
.
Command
Purpose
Step 1
Router(config-pmap)#
policy-map
policy-map-name
Creates or modifies a bottom-level child policy map.
policy-map-name
is the name of the policy map. The name can be
a maximum of 40 alphanumeric characters.
Step 2
Router(config-pmap)#
class
class-map-name
Assigns the traffic class you specify to the policy map. Enters
policy-map class configuration mode.
class-map-name
is the name of a previously configured class map
and is the traffic class for which you want to define QoS actions.