From: Radioactive Frog (pbhatkoti@gmail.com)
Date: Wed Mar 28 2007 - 08:33:12 ART
Hi Feras,
Thanks heaps.
So in layman terms :-
OUT --> Going out of switch (doens't matter what interface) - Egress ?
IN --> Coming into the switch - Ingress ?
Frog
On 3/27/07, Feras Abunamous (fabunamo) <fabunamo@cisco.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> The last one should ve been coming from the LAN
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Feras Abunamous (fabunamo)
> Sent: Monday, March 26, 2007 2:54 PM
> To: 'Radioactive Frog'; Cisco certification
> Subject: RE: Service policy input/output
>
>
>
> Frog, answers inline...
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
> Radioactive Frog
> Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 6:24 PM
> To: Cisco certification
> Subject: Service policy input/output
>
> Hi Gang,
>
> Just wondering if anyone can clear my doubt about the direction of
> service
> policy command.
>
>
> Lets say the following is the scenario:
>
> Internet----------eth0-------Router--------eth1-------SWITCH---------LAN
>
> eth0---> connected to internet and eth1 connected to LAN.
>
>
> If I create a service policy "ABCD" please clearify the following :-
>
> 1) When to use "service policy ABCD out" on eth0 ----> for traffic
> going to the internet
> 2) When to use "service policy ABCD out" on eth1 -----> traffic going
> out to the LAN
> 3) When to use "service policy ABCD in" on eth0 --------> traffic
> coming from the internet
> 4) When to use "service policy ABCD in" on eth1 --------> traffic coming
> from the LAN
>
> Thanks for your inputs in advance.
>
> Frog..
>
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