03-25-2009 04:23 AM - edited 03-06-2019 04:48 AM
Hi,
Can someone explain to me what these commands do? If the acl matches the traffic wil it mark the packets, even it is not for the route map?
ip local policy route-map DSCP
route-map DSCP permit 10
match IP address ACL
Set ip precedence network
Thanks
J.
03-25-2009 05:02 AM
Jorg
"ip local policy route-map DSCP" means this route-map is being applied to packets generated by the router itself ie. the "local" keyword.
"set ip precedence network"
set the IP precedence value to 7. 6 & 7 are used to prioritize network protocols such as routing updates etc.
"If the acl matches the traffic wil it mark the packets, even it is not for the route map? "
Not sure what you mean by this. Packets will only be marked if they match the acl which is referenced by the route-map.
Jon
03-25-2009 05:25 AM
Hi Jon,
In our situation it marks an ip range en it set the precedence to network. is it possible that when the traffic hits the access lists it will be marked as network traffic Q7, even it is not used in the route map. (i don't think so, just checking).
Jorg
03-25-2009 05:49 AM
Jorg
I don't think i understand what you are asking to be honest.
If a route-map references an acl and is applied on a particular interface then any traffic on that interface that is matched by the acl will have the route-map set clause applied.
If traffic matches the acl but is on an interface that doesn't have the route-map applied then no that traffic will not be marked.
Jon
03-25-2009 06:07 AM
Thanks Jon,
That is what I was thinking.
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