Allied Telesis AT-S63 User Manual

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AT-S63 Management Software Features Guide
Section II: Advanced Operations
111
Overview
A classifier defines a traffic flow. A traffic flow consists of packets that 
share one or more characteristics. A traffic flow can range from being very 
broad to very specific. An example of the former might be all IP traffic while 
an example of the latter could be packets with specific source and 
destination MAC addresses.
A classifier contains a set of criteria for defining a traffic flow. Examples of 
the variables include source and destination MAC addresses, source and 
destination IP addresses, IP protocols, source and destination TCP and 
UDP ports numbers, and so on. You can also specify more than one 
criteria within a classifier to make the definition of the traffic flow more 
specific. Some of the variables you can mix-and-match, but there are 
restrictions, as explained later in this section in the descriptions of the 
individual variables.
By itself, a classifier does not perform any action or produce any result 
because it lacks instructions on what a port should do when it receives a 
packet that belongs to the defined traffic flow. Rather, the action is 
established outside the classifier. As a result, you will never use a 
classifier by itself.
There are two AT-S63 features that use classifiers. They are:
ˆ
Access control lists (ACL)
ˆ
Quality of Service (QoS) policies
As explained in Chapter 11, “Access Control Lists” on page 119, an ACL 
filters ingress packets on a port by controlling which packets a port will 
accept and reject. You can use this feature to improve the security of your 
network or enhance network performance by creating network paths or 
links dedicated to carrying specific types of traffic.
When you create an ACL you must specify the traffic flow you want the 
ACL to control. You do that by creating one or more classifiers and adding 
the classifiers to the ACL. The action that the port takes when an ingress 
packet matches the traffic flow specified by a classifier is contained in the 
ACL itself. The action will be to either accept packets of the traffic flow or 
discard them.
The other feature that uses classifiers is Quality of Service (QoS) policies. 
You can use this feature to regulate the various traffic flows that pass 
through the switch. For instance, you might raise or lower their user priority 
values or increase or decrease their allotted bandwidths.
As with an ACL, you specify the traffic flow of interest by creating one or 
more classifiers and applying them to a QoS policy. The action to be taken 
by a port when it receives a packet that corresponds to the prescribed flow