From Infrastructure Router Security Technical Implementation Guide Cisco
Part of Management traffic is not classified and marked
When network congestion occurs, all traffic has an equal chance of being dropped.
class-map match-all MANAGEMENT-TRAFFIC match access-group name CLASSIFY-MANAGEMENT-TRAFFIC ! policy-map DIST-LAYER-POLICY class MANAGEMENT-TRAFFIC set ip dscp 48 ! interface FastEthernet0/0 description link to LAN1 ip address 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0 service-policy input DIST-LAYER-POLICY interface FastEthernet0/1 description link to LAN2 ip address 192.168.2.1 255.255.255.0 service-policy input DIST-LAYER-POLICY interface FastEthernet0/2 description link to core ip address 192.168.13.1 255.255.255.0 ! ip access-list extended CLASSIFY-MANAGEMENT-TRAFFIC permit ip any 10.2.2.0 0.0.0.255 Note: Traffic is marked using the set command in a policy map. For DSCP rewrite, if a packet encounters both input and output classification policy, the output policy has precedence. If there is no output policy, then the input policy has precedence.
When management traffic must traverse several nodes to reach the management network, classify and mark management traffic at the nearest upstream MLS or router.
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