Cisco Cisco Packet Data Interworking Function (PDIF) Guía Para Resolver Problemas
Policy-Based Management and EV-DO Rev A
▀ Policy-based Management Overview
▄ Cisco ASR 5000 Series Enhanced Feature Configuration Guide
OL-22982-01
Policy-based Management Overview
Policy-based management provides a way to allocate network resources; primarily network bandwidth, Quality of
Service (QoS), security, and accounting according to defined business policies. These policies can be either static or
dynamic. In a static policy the traffic flow is predefined by exact rules. For dynamic policies, the flows are created
dynamically by external signaling. The dynamic policies validate the flows and apply the necessary policy actions
required for each flow.
Service (QoS), security, and accounting according to defined business policies. These policies can be either static or
dynamic. In a static policy the traffic flow is predefined by exact rules. For dynamic policies, the flows are created
dynamically by external signaling. The dynamic policies validate the flows and apply the necessary policy actions
required for each flow.
In flow-based traffic policies, policy modules interact with the system through a set of well defined entry points, provide
access to a stream of system events and permit the defined policies to implement access control decisions, provide QoS
enforcement and accounting decisions, etc.
access to a stream of system events and permit the defined policies to implement access control decisions, provide QoS
enforcement and accounting decisions, etc.
A policy is defined as
policy: condition = > action
condition: specifies the flow-parameters such as source-address, destination-address, source-port, destination-
port, protocol, etc. for ingress and/or egress packets.
action: specifies a set of treatments for a flow/packet when condition matches. These actions are typically based
on flow classification and QoS processing for individual flows and DSCP marking.
Supported Standards
The following standards were referenced for the system‘s EV-DO Rev A implementation:
CDMA2000 Wireless IP Network Standard: Introduction, X.P0011-001-D v 0.5
CDMA2000 Wireless IP Network Standards: Quality of Service and Header Reduction, X.P0011-004-D v 0.5
CDMA2000 Wireless IP Network Standards: Accounting Services and 3GPP2 RADIUS VSAs, X.P0011-005-D
v 0.5
Interoperability Specification (IOS) for CDMA2000 Access Network Interfaces - Part 7 (A10 and A11
Interfaces), A.S0017-C v0.4, IOS v5.0, June 2004
Interoperability Specification (IOS) for High Rate Packet Data (HRPD) Radio Access Network Interfaces with
Session Control in the Packet Control Function, V&V Version, A.S0009 v0.3, May 2005
Perkins, IPv4 Mobility, RFC 3344, August 2002
Braden, R.,et al, Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1, RFC 2205, September 1997, Proposed
Standard.