Hierarchical Policies - Cisco 10000 Series Configuration Manual

Quality of service configuration guide
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Hierarchical Policies

Hierarchical Policies
A hierarchical policy is a QoS model that enables you to specify QoS behavior at multiple levels of
hierarchy. The router supports three types of hierarchical policies: nested, three-level, and input policing
policies. Depending on the type of hierarchical policy you configure, you can use hierarchical policies
to:
Note
For more information about the types of hierarchical policies, see the
section on page
Input Policing Policies" section on page
All hierarchical policy types consist of a top-level parent policy and one or more child policies. The
service-policy command is used to apply a policy to another policy, and a policy to an interface,
subinterface, virtual circuit (VC), or virtual LAN (VLAN). For example, in a three-level hierarchical
policy, you use the service-policy command to apply a:
For more information, see the
Note
page
When you use hierarchical policies, the router allocates the physical pipe into smaller pipes. Instead of
creating a single versatile time management scheduler (VTMS) link for the physical interface, each
parent policy map has a VTMS link. The router uses this QoS link to service the associated traffic
independently of other traffic.
For releases prior to Cisco IOS Release 12.0(25)SX, the router uses 128 discrete values between 64 kbps
and 1 Gbps as multiqueue shape rates. Therefore, the sum of the nested policy shape rates you specify
for an interface must be 64 kbps less than the total bandwidth of the interface. For example, on a DS1
Frame Relay interface with a total bandwidth of 1536 kbps, the combined shape rate of the hierarchical
policy must be 1472 kbps or less:
If you specify a non-supported rate, the router uses the next lower supported rate instead.
For Cisco IOS Release 12.0(25)SX and Release 12.3(7)XI, and later releases, the router allows interface
oversubscription. For more information, see
Cisco 10000 Series Router Quality of Service Configuration Guide
13-2
Specify multiple policy maps to shape multiple queues together
Apply specific policy map actions on the aggregate traffic
Apply class-specific policy map actions
Restrict the maximum bandwidth of a virtual circuit (VC) while allowing policing and marking of
traffic classes within the VC
13-6,
"Three-Level Hierarchical Policies" section on page
Bottom-level child policy to a middle-level child policy
Middle-level child policy to a top-level parent policy
Top-level parent policy to an interface, subinterface, VC, or VLAN
13-4, and the
"service-policy Command" section on page
1536 kbps – 64 kbps = 1472 kbps
13-10).
"Child Policy" section on page
Chapter 15, "Oversubscribing Physical and Virtual Links."
Chapter 13
Defining QoS for Multiple Policy Levels
"Nested Hierarchical Policies"
13-8, and the
13-4, the
"Parent Policy" section on
13-5.
"Hierarchical
OL-7433-09

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