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Configuring Tricolor Marking

Networks police traffic by limiting the input or output transmission rate of a class of traffic on the basis of user-defined criteria. Policing traffic allows you to control the maximum rate of traffic sent or received on an interface and to partition a network into multiple priority levels or classes of service.

Policers require you to apply limits to the traffic flow, and set a consequence for packets that exceed these limits—usually a higher loss priority, so that packets exceeding the policer limits are discarded first.

Juniper Networks routing platform architectures can support three types of policer:

TCM is not bound by a green-yellow-red coloring convention. Packets are usually marked with low, medium, or high PLP bit configurations based on color, so both TCM schemes extend the functionality of class-of-service (CoS) traffic policing by providing three levels of drop precedence (loss priority) instead of the two normally available in port-level policers. Both single-rate and two-rate TCM schemes can operate in two modes:

This chapter discusses the following topics:


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