RE: Simple Q:CBWFQ !

From: Church, Chuck (cchurch@wamnetgov.com)
Date: Tue Jan 06 2004 - 20:37:27 GMT-3


Here's the rule on the 2500s:

Physically, all the boards have one single inline memory module (SIMM) slot (72-pin, 70 ns). Furthermore, if the board's revision level is A through G, there are an additional 2 MB of RAM soldered to the system card. If the revision level is I through N, there is no RAM soldered to the system card.

The board revision number can be checked using the show version command:

cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision A) with 16380K/2048K bytes of memory.

Chuck Church
CCIE #8776, MCNE, MCSE
Wam!Net Government Services
13665 Dulles Technology Dr. Ste 250
Herndon, VA 20171
Office: 703-480-2569
Cell: 703-819-3495
cchurch@wamnetgov.com
PGP key: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=index&search=cchurch%40wamnetgov.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Nathasha Aleyevka [mailto:naleyevka@yahoo.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 3:43 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com; cisco@groupstudy.com
Subject: Simple Q:CBWFQ !

  I have been working on CBWFQ
config and have a question regarding class-map
creation.

I defined the class maps for protocols X, Y and Z,
then create a policy and finally applied it to an
interface

class-map match-any X
match protocol X

class-map match-any Y
match protocol Y

class-map match-any Z
match protocol Z

Q1: When do I use match-all vs match-any?
Q2: For the rest of the traffic do I need to define a
class-map match "class-default" or
class-map match Other-- does it matter?
Thank you
Nathasha

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