Glossary

Policy-based Routing (PBR)
Policy-based routing (PBR) allows a switch to make routing decisions based on policies applied to an interface.
Topics:
Overview
Implementing PBR
Configuration Task List for Policy-based Routing
Sample Configuration
Overview
When a router receives a packet, the router decides where to forward the packet based on the destination address in the
packet, which is used to look up an entry in a routing table. However, in some cases, there may be a need to forward the packet
based on other criteria: size, source, protocol type, destination, and so on. For example, a network administrator might want to
forward a packet that uses transmission control protocol (TCP) across a different next-hop than packets using Internet control
message protocol (ICMP). In these situations, you can a configure switch route packet according to a policy applied to
interfaces.
In another scenario, when the packet comes from one source and wants to go to another destination, then route it to this next-
hop or onto that specific interface. This permits routing over different links or towards different networks even while the
destination is the same but depending on where the packet originates.
To enable PBR, create a redirect list. Redirect lists are defined by rules or routing policies. You can define following parameters
in routing policies or rules:
IP address of the forwarding router (next-hop IP address)
Protocol as defined in the header
Source IP address and mask
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