From: Venkataramanaiah.R (vramanaiah@gmail.com)
Date: Thu Oct 27 2005 - 07:26:39 GMT-3
Hi,
That is certainly not a stupid question.. This was discussed recently.. The
be value will not be used if the violate action is not specified, basically
w/o violate action, be does not have any role to play.. Basically what this
means is policing uses a single token bucket of size bc and loses the
bursting capability. Note this is unlike CAR where it allows bursting
although it uses only a single token bucket but w/o support for violate
action. The reason behind it is CAR uses the bucket size of be, whereas
police uses a bucket size bc.
-Venkat
On 10/27/05, Cisco Nuts <cisconuts@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi: This might be a stupid question but when you configure the be value
> under the policy-map, why do you not see it when you do a show policy-map
> int ?? policy-map CAR
> class ICMP
> police cir 8000 bc 2000 be 2000
> conform-action drop
> exceed-action drop r5#sh policy-map int s0/0 | beg ICMP
> Class-map: ICMP (match-all)
> 0 packets, 0 bytes
> 5 minute offered rate 0 bps, drop rate 0 bps
> Match: protocol icmp
> police:
> cir 8000 bps, bc 2000 bytes
> conformed 0 packets, 0 bytes; actions:
> drop
> exceeded 0 packets, 0 bytes; actions:
> drop
> conformed 0 bps, exceed 0 bps Thanks !!!
>
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