Users Guide
• Estimated CAM — the estimated number of CAM entries that the policy will consume when it is applied to an interface.
• Status — indicates whether the specied policy-map can be completely applied to an interface in the port-pipe.
• Allowed — indicates that the policy-map can be applied because the estimated number of CAM entries is less or equal to the 
available number of CAM entries. The number of interfaces in the port-pipe to which the policy-map can be applied is given in 
parentheses.
• Exception — indicates that the number of CAM entries required to write the policy-map to the CAM is greater than the number of 
available CAM entries, and therefore the policy-map cannot be applied to an interface in the specied port-pipe.
NOTE: The show cam-usage command provides much of the same information as the test cam-usage command, but 
whether a policy-map can be successfully applied to an interface cannot be determined without rst measuring how many CAM 
entries the policy-map would consume; the test cam-usage command is useful because it provides this measurement.
• Verify that there are enough available CAM entries.
test cam-usage
Example of the test cam-usage Command
Dell# test cam-usage service-policy input pmap_l2 port-set 0 | port pipe
Port-pipe | CAM Partition | Available CAM | Estimated CAM | Status
=====================================================================
 0 L2ACL 500 200 Allowed(2)
Specifying Policy-Based Rate Shaping in Packets Per 
Second
You can congure the rate shaping in packets per second (pps) for QoS output policies.
You can congure rate shaping in pps for a QoS output policy, apart from specifying the rate shaping value in bytes. You can also congure 
the peak rate and the committed rate for packets in kilobits per second (Kbps) or pps.
Committed rate refers to the guaranteed bandwidth for trac entering or leaving the interface under normal network conditions. When 
trac propagates at an average rate that is less than or equal to the committed rate, it is considered to be green-colored or coded. When 
the transmitted trac falls below the committed rate, the bandwidth, which is not used by any trac that is traversing the network, is 
aggregated to form the committed burst size. Trac is considered to be green-colored up to the point at which the unused bandwidth 
does not exceed the committed burst size.
Peak rate refers to the maximum rate for trac arriving or exiting an interface under normal trac conditions. Peak burst size indicates the 
maximum size of unused peak bandwidth that is aggregated. This aggregated bandwidth enables brief durations of burst trac that 
exceeds the peak rate and committed burst.
In releases of Dell Networking OS earlier than Release 9.3(0.0), you can congure only the maximum shaping attributes, such as the peak 
rate and the peak burst settings. You can now specify the committed or minimum burst and committed rate attributes. The committed 
burst and committed rate values can be dened either in bytes or pps.
You can use the rate-shape pps peak-rate burst-packets command in the QoS Policy Out Conguration mode to congure 
the peak rate and burst size as a measure of pps. Alternatively, you can use the rate shape kbps peak-rate burst-KB command 
to congure the peak rate and peak burst size as a measure of bytes.
Similarly, you can use the rate-shape pps peak-rate burst-packets committed pps committed-rate burst-
packets command in the QoS Policy Out Conguration mode to congure the committed rate and committed burst size as a measure of 
pps. Alternatively, you can use the 
rate shape kbps peak-rate burst-KB committed kbps committed-rate burst-
KB command to congure the committed rate and committed burst size as a measure of bytes. If you congure the peak rate in pps, the 
peak burst size must also be congured as a measure of number of packets. Similarly, if you congure the peak rate in Kbps, the peak burst 
size must also be congured as a measure of bytes.
Quality of Service (QoS)
717










