Configuring iSCSI TLV
Step 4
Step 5
Step 6
This example shows how to define a QOS policy map.
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# policy-map type qos c1
switch(config-pmap-qos)# class c1
switch(config-pmap-c-qos)# set qos-group 2
switch(config-pmap-c-qos)# exit
switch(config-pmap-qos)# class class-default
Configuring No-Drop Policy Maps
Procedure
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
Step 5
OL-30895-01
Command or Action
switch(config-pmap-c-qos)# set
qos-group qos-group-value
switch(config-pmap-c-qos)# exit
switch(config-pmap-qos)# class
class-default
Command or Action
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# class-map type
{network-qos | queuing}
class-name
switch(config-cmap-nq)# match
qos-group qos-group-value
switch(config-cmap-nq)# exit
switch(config)# policy-map
type network-qos policy-name
Cisco Nexus 5500 Series NX-OS SAN Switching Configuration Guide, Release 7.x
Purpose
Configures one or more qos-group values to match for
classification of traffic into this class map. The range of
qos-group-values is from 2 to 5. There is no default value.
Note
The Cisco Nexus 5000 Series switch can only
support a maximum of five qos-groups within this
range.
Exits qos configuration mode and enters policy-map mode.
To add a reference to the system default class that does not
match any traffic class, use the class class-default command.
Purpose
Enters global configuration mode.
Creates a named object that represents a class of traffic.
Class-map names can contain alphabetic, hyphen, or underscore
characters, are case sensitive, and can be up to 40 characters.
Configures the traffic class by matching packets based on a list
of QoS group values. Values can range from 0 to 5. QoS group
0 is equivalent to class-default and QoS group 1 is equivalent to
class-fcoe.
qos-groups 0 and 1 are reserved for default classes and
Note
cannot be configured.
Exits class-map mode and enters global configuration mode.
Creates a named object that represents a set of policies that are
to be applied to a set of traffic classes. Policy-map names can
contain alphabetic, hyphen, or underscore characters, are case
sensitive, and can be up to 40 characters.
Configuring No-Drop Policy Maps
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