The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For the purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product. Learn more about how Cisco is using Inclusive Language.
The Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature provides two levels of policing where the policer ordering is evaluated from
child to parent, and there is preferential treatment of certain traffic at the parent level. Beginning in Cisco IOS XE Release
3.2S, this feature is enabled on the Cisco ASR 1000 series Aggregation Services Routers through the following support and
changes:
Reverse the order of dataplane policing in hierarchical policies so that they are evaluated from child to parent. In prior
releases, the policies are evaluated from parent to child.
Limited support for color-aware policing (RFC 2697 and RFC 2698) within Quality of Service (QoS) policies.
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information,
see
Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module,
and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table at the end of this
module.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature
Navigator, go to
www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Prerequisites for Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
You must have Cisco IOS XE Release 3.2S or a later version installed and running on your Cisco ASR 1000 series router.
You must already be familiar with relevant features and technologies including modular QoS CLI (MQC) and the master control
processor (MCP) software and hardware architecture. The Additional References section provides pointers to relevant feature and technology documents.
Restrictions for Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
The following restrictions apply to the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature:
Color-aware class maps support only QoS group matching.
Only one filter (one match statement) per color-aware class is supported.
Color-aware statistics are not supported, only existing policer statistics.
Color-aware class map removal (using the no class-map class-map-name
command) is not allowed while the class map is being referenced in a color-aware policer. It must be removed from all color-aware
policers (using either the no conform-color class-map-name
or no exceed-color class-map-name
command first).
Hierarchical policer evaluation is permanently reversed (not configurable) to support child-to-parent ordering.
Information About Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
Hierarchical Order Policing
Prior to Cisco IOS XE Release 3.2S, the Cisco ASR 1000 series platform supported policers in hierarchical policies with an
evaluation order of parent to child. With the introduction of the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature, the evaluation
order is reversed so that policers are evaluated from child to parent in QoS policies. This ordering is a permanent change
to the default behavior and is not configurable. The reverse order policer functionality is shared for both ingress and egress
directions.
The following sample configuration for a simple two-level policer would result in the changed behavior shown in the figure
below:
policy-map child
class user1
police 100k
class user2
police 100k
policy-map parent
class class-default
police 150k
service-policy child
Limited Color-Aware
Policing
The following sample
configuration for a simple two-level color-aware policer would result in the
changed behavior shown in the figure below:
ip access-list extended user1-acl
permit ip host 192.168.1.1 any
permit ip host 192.168.1.2 any
ip access-list extended user2-acl
permit ip host 192.168.2.1 any
permit ip host 192.168.2.2 any
class-map match-all user1-acl-child
match access-group name user1-acl
class-map match-all user2-acl-child
match access-group name user2-acl
class-map match-all hipri-conform
match qos-group 5
policy-map child-policy
class user1-acl-child
police 10000 bc 1500
conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
class user2-acl-child
police 20000 bc 1500
conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
class class-default
police 50000 bc 1500
policy-map parent-policy
class class-default
police 50000 bc 3000
confirm-action transmit
exceed-action transmit
violate-action drop
conform-color hipri-conform
service-policy child-policy
Note
To avoid drops at
the parent level for "conformed" child traffic, the parent policer must have a
rate and burst that are equal to or greater than the sum of the child conform
rates and burst sizes. There is no check for inappropriate (parent-to-child)
rates and burst sizes in code. You must be aware of this limitation and
configure appropriately. In the following example, explicit marking actions are
supported in conjunction with color-aware policing and operate similarly
color-aware policer marking actions. If these marking actions ("set qos-group,"
for example) are present in the child policies, the resulting bit values are
evaluated by the parent color-aware policer (same as for child policer marking
actions): 50k >= 10k (user1-acl-child) + 20k (user2-acl-child)
Policing Traffic in Child Classes and Parent Classes
Prior to the release of the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature, policing and marking were typically used as input
QoS options. For example, a voice customer was limited to 112 kb/s for voice control and 200 kb/s for voice traffic. The class-default
class has no policer. The only limit is the physical bandwidth of the xDSL connection. As shown in the figure below, a customer
could send up to 1000 kb/s. However, this involved sending more voice and voice-control packets, which required policing the
traffic for both classes.
As shown in the figure below, it is important to control the overall input bandwidth. The important requirement is that the
premium traffic in the overall limit is not affected. In the figure below, voice and voice-control packets are not dropped
in the overall limit. Only packets from the child class-default class are dropped to fulfill the limit.
The first classes function the same way. Voice and voice-control are policed to the allowed level and the class-default class
is not affected. In the next level, the overall bandwidth is forced to 500 kb/s and must only drop packets from the class-default
class. Voice and voice-control must remain unaffected.
The order of policer execution is as follows:
Police the traffic in the child classes, as shown in the figure above, police VoIP-Control class to 112 kb/s, police VoIP
class to 200 kb/s, and police class-default to 500 kb/s.
Police the traffic in the class default of the parent policy map, but only drop the traffic from the child class default,
and do not drop the remaining child classes. As shown in the figure above, 112 kb/s VoIP-Control and 200 kb/s VoIP traffic
are unaffected at the parent policer, but 500 kb/s class default from the child is policed to 188kb/s to meet the overall
police policy of 500 kb/s at the parent level.
How to Configure Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
Configuring the Hierarchical
Color-Aware Policing Feature
SUMMARY STEPS
enable
configure terminal
policy-map policy-map-name
class {class-name |
class-default
[fragment fragment-class-name]} [insert-before class-name]
[service-fragment fragment-class-name]
Enters
policy-map configuration mode and creates a policy map.
Step 4
class {class-name |
class-default
[fragment fragment-class-name]} [insert-before class-name]
[service-fragment fragment-class-name]
Example:
Router(config-pmap)# class class-default
Enters
policy-map class configuration mode.
Specifies
the name of the class whose policy you want to create or change or specifies
the default class (commonly known as the class-default class) before you
configure its policy. Repeat this command as many times as necessary to specify
the child or parent classes that you are creating or modifying:
classname--Name of the class to be configured or whose policy is
to be modified. The class name is used for both the class map and to configure
a policy for the class in the policy map.
class-default --Specifies the default class so that you can configure
or modify its policy.
fragment fragment-class-name--(Optional) Specifies the default traffic class as a
fragment, and names the fragment traffic class.
insert-before class-name--(Optional) Adds a class map between any two existing
class maps. Inserting a new class map between two existing class maps provides
more flexibility when modifying existing policy map configurations. Without
this option, the class map is appended to the policy map.
Note
This keyword
is supported only on flexible packet matching (FPM) policies.
service-fragment fragment-class-name--(Optional) Specifies that the class is classifying a
collection of fragments. The fragments being classified by this class must all
share the same fragment class name.
Configures
traffic policing and specifies multiple actions applied to packets marked as
conforming to, exceeding, or violating a specific rate.
Enters
policy-map class police configuration mode. Use one line per action that you
want to specify:
cir --Committed information rate. Indicates that the CIR
will be used for policing traffic.
conform-action --(Optional) Action to take on packets when the rate is
less than the conform burst.
exceed-action --(Optional) Action to take on packets whose rate is
within the conform and conform plus exceed burst.
violate-action --(Optional) Action to take on packets whose rate
exceeds the conform plus exceed burst. You must specify the exceed action
before you specify the violate action.
conform-color --(Optional) Enables color-aware policing (on the
policer being configured) and assigns the class map to be used for conform
color determination. The
hipri-conform
keyword is the class map (previously configured via the
class-map
command) to be used.
Specifies a
service policy as a QoS policy within a policy map (called a hierarchical
service policy).
policy-map-name--Name of the predefined policy map to be used as a QoS
policy. The name can be a maximum of 40 alphanumeric characters.
Step 7
end
Example:
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# end
Exits the
current configuration mode.
Example
The following is
a sample configuration for the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature,
showing the reverse order for policing:
class-map match-all user1-acl-child
match access-group name user1-acl
class-map match-all user2-acl-child
match access-group name user2-acl
class-map match-all hipri-conform
match qos-group 5
policy-map child-policy
class user1-acl-child
police 10000 bc 1500
conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
class user2-acl-child
police 20000 bc 1500
conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
class class-default
police 50000 bc 1500
policy-map parent-policy
class class-default
police 50000 bc 3000
exceed-action transmit
violate-action drop
conform-color hipri-conform
service-policy child-policy
Configuration Examples for Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
Example Enable the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing Feature
The following example shows a sample configuration that enables the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature:
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# ip access-list extended user1-acl
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.1.1 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.1.2 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# ip access-list extended user2-acl
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.2.1 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.2.2 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# exit
Router(config)# class-map match-all user1-acl-child
Router(config-cmap)# match access-group name user1-acl
Router(config-cmap)# class-map match-all user2-acl-child
Router(config-cmap)# match access-group name user2-acl
Router(config-cmap)# class-map match-all hipri-conform
Router(config-cmap)# match qos-group 5
Router(config-cmap)# exit
Router(config)# policy-map child-policy
Router(config-pmap)# class user1-acl-child
Router(config-pmap-c)# police cir 10000 bc 1500
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# class user2-acl-child
Router(config-pmap-c)# police cir 20000 bc 1500
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# exit
Router(config-pmap-c)# exit
Router(config-pmap)# exit
Router(config)# policy-map parent-policy
Router(config-pmap)# class class-default
Router(config-pmap-c)# police cir 50000 bc 3000
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# exceed-action transmit
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# violate-action drop
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-color hipri-conform
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# service-policy child-policy
Example Disallowing Multiple Entries in Class Map
The following example shows a rejected attempt to configure multiple entries in a class map:
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# class-map hipri-conform
Router(config-cmap)# match qos-group 5
Router(config-cmap)# match qos-group 6
Only one match statement is supported for color-aware policing
Router(config-cmap)# no match qos-group 6
Example Disallowing the Removal of an Active Color-Aware Class Map
The following example shows that an active color-aware class map cannot be disallowed:
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# no class-map hipri-conform
Class-map hipri-conform is being used
Example Dismantling a Configuration of the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing Feature
The following example shows how to dismantle the configuration of the Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature:
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# no policy-map parent-policy
Router(config)# no policy-map child-policy
Router(config)# no class-map hipri-conform
Router(config)# no class-map user1-acl-child
Router(config)# no class-map user2-acl-child
Example Enabling Hierarchical
Color-Aware Policing
The following
example shows how to enable Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing:
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# ip access-list extended user1-acl
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.1.1 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.1.2 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# ip access-list extended user2-acl
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.2.1 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip host 192.168.2.2 any
Router(config-ext-nacl)# class-map match-all user1-acl-child
Router(config-cmap)# match access-group name user1-acl
Router(config-cmap)# class-map match-all user2-acl-child
Router(config-cmap)# match access-group name user2-acl
Router(config-cmap)# class-map match-all hipri-conform
Router(config-cmap)# match qos-group 5
Router(config-cmap)# policy-map child-policy
Router(config-pmap)# class user1-acl-child
Router(config-pmap-c)# police 10000 bc 1500
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# class user2-acl-child
Router(config-pmap-c)# police 20000 bc 1500
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# class class-default
Router(config-pmap-c)# police 50000 bc 1500
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# policy-map parent-policy
Router(config-pmap)# class class-default
Router(config-pmap-c)# police 50000 bc 3000
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# exceed-action transmit
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# violate-action drop
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# conform-color hipri-conform
Router(config-pmap-c-police)# service-policy child-policy
Router(config-pmap-c)# end
Router#
*Sep 16 12:31:11.536: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by console
Router# show class-map
Class Map match-all user1-acl-child (id 4)
Match access-group name user1-acl
Class Map match-all user2-acl-child (id 5)
Match access-group name user2-acl
Class Map match-any class-default (id 0)
Match any
Class Map match-all hipri-conform (id 3)
Match qos-group 5
Router# show policy-map
Policy Map parent-policy
Class class-default
police cir 50000 bc 3000 be 3000
conform-color hipri-conform
conform-action transmit
exceed-action transmit
violate-action drop
service-policy child-policy
Policy Map police
Class prec1
priority level 1 20000 (kb/s)
Class prec2
bandwidth 20000 (kb/s)
Class class-default
bandwidth 20000 (kb/s)
Policy Map child-policy
Class user1-acl-child
police cir 10000 bc 1500
conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
exceed-action drop
Class user2-acl-child
police cir 20000 bc 1500
conform-action set-qos-transmit 5
exceed-action drop
Class class-default
police cir 50000 bc 1500
conform-action transmit
exceed-action drop
Example Applying show Command
with Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
The following is
sample output from the
show policy-map interface command when a policy with hierarchical
color-aware policing is applied:
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use
these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products
and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password.
Feature Information for Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists
only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise,
subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco
Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Table 1. Feature Information for Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
Feature Name
Releases
Feature Information
Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.2S
The Hierarchical Color-Aware Policing feature provides for two levels of policing where the policer ordering is evaluated
from child to parent, and there is preferential treatment of certain traffic at the parent level.