RE: Trivial police cir cmd. question

From: simon hart (simon@harttel.com)
Date: Thu Oct 27 2005 - 09:20:19 GMT-3


Hi

The reason is that you have no violate action. The police command in mqc
behaves differently from the days of CAR.

The be is the number of bytes that can be transmitted if enough credits are
available within the token bucket, these packets will be marked with the
exceed action.
However anything above that figure will also be marked with the exceed
action, therefore everything above bc will have the exceed action applied to
it.
Now if you configure a violate-action you will see be in the show policy int

Simon

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of Cisco
Nuts
Sent: 27 October 2005 09:41
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Cc: cisconuts@hotmail.com
Subject: Trivial police cir cmd. question

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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