
584
C
HAPTER
22: Q
O
S
AND
RSVP
■
For the rate limit type receivePort or aggregate:
■
Service level for nonconforming excess (packets exceeding the rate
limit)
■
Whether nonconforming excess are loss eligible
■
How the rate limit is expressed (percentage of port bandwidth or
KBps)
■
Rate-limit value (0 through 65434 Kbps or 0 through 100 percent)
■
Burst size in Kbytes (
16
through
8192
; the default value depends
on your specified rate limit)
■
Bridge ports for which you want to enable the specified rate limit
value (specified bridge ports or all bridge ports). If you specify a
subset of available ports, you can enter another rate-limit value for
another set of ports.
■
For any type of rate limit (and a service level other than drop), any
combination of IEEE 802.1p priority tag values in the range of from
0
through
7
or
none
to apply to forwarded frames. By default, no tags
are applied unless the associated classifier defines a tag value. In that
case, the tag value from the associated classifier is used for the
forwarded frames.
■
Whether to drop packets used to establish TCP connections. This is a
form of one-way filtering for flow classifiers only. The default is no.
■
Enable control start and stop times. Similar to how a VCR operates,
this timer allows you to set the desired beginning and ending period
for a control. The default is no.
If you select yes, you set the following:
■
Input time type such as daily, weekdays, or weekends. You can also
choose a “specific” type that lets you choose an exact day.
■
The starting time expressed in hours, minutes, and am or pm.
■
The ending time expressed in hours, minutes, and am or pm.
■
One or more classifiers (classifier numbers) that are subject to this
control.
Summary of Contents for 4007
Page 36: ...36 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 37: ...I UNDERSTANDING YOUR SWITCH 4007 SYSTEM Chapter 1 Configuration Overview ...
Page 38: ......
Page 50: ...50 CHAPTER 1 CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW ...
Page 52: ......
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 3 INSTALLING MANAGEMENT MODULES ...
Page 110: ...110 CHAPTER 4 CONFIGURING AND USING EME OPTIONS ...
Page 130: ...130 CHAPTER 5 MANAGING THE CHASSIS POWER AND TEMPERATURE ...
Page 222: ...222 CHAPTER 11 IP MULTICAST FILTERING WITH IGMP ...
Page 240: ...240 CHAPTER 13 RESILIENT LINKS ...
Page 304: ...304 CHAPTER 14 VIRTUAL LANS VLANS ...
Page 350: ...350 CHAPTER 15 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 506: ...506 CHAPTER 19 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ROUTING ...
Page 534: ...534 CHAPTER 20 IPX ROUTING ...
Page 612: ...612 CHAPTER 22 QOS AND RSVP ...
Page 656: ...656 CHAPTER 23 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 657: ...IV REFERENCE Appendix A Technical Support Index ...
Page 658: ......
Page 664: ......