A network administrator needs to configure an AOS-Switch to classify traffic. Comparing QoS policy and global policy, what is one function that only a class-based
QoS policy can fulfill?
A network administrator needs to configure an AOS-Switch to classify traffic. Comparing QoS policy and global policy, what is one function that only a class-based
QoS policy can fulfill?
A class-based QoS policy allows for more granular control in classifying and treating traffic. Specifically, it can apply specific settings like DSCP values to certain types of traffic from select sources, while exempting others. This granular application is not typically possible with a global policy, which tends to apply settings uniformly across all traffic.
The good one is A.
global policy A
correct answer is A