01-25-2007 08:51 AM - edited 03-05-2019 01:59 PM
While configuring an ME3400 for the first time, I noticed that the physical interfaces offer the ability to enter a 'rate-limit' command. There is also the option to configure policing within a 'policy-map' and attach that to an interface using the 'service-policy' command. My question is, what's the difference between the two, if any? If there is no difference, then why does 'rate-limit' offer more flexible BC options (1000-512000000) than the policy-map 'police' option which imposes a 1Mb burst limitation?
01-31-2007 02:05 PM
There is a nice example on the usage of Police and Rate-Limit.
02-01-2007 06:23 AM
Thanks, but unfortunately, my question wasn't about how to configure either feature. If you could provide an answer to the question I posed, I'd really appreciate it. I'm also not asking about the difference between traffic shaping and policing.
06-15-2011 04:59 PM
Perhaps this explanation helps.
"Cisco recommends using the modular QoS CLI features when possible to implement quality of service in your network. Use class-based policing through the police command in a service policy to implement rate limiting without buffering or queuing. Avoid using CAR, for which no new features or functionality is planned."
Source:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk543/tk545/technologies_tech_note09186a00800d7276.shtml
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