6.5.1

Table Of Contents
Disable Trac Filtering and Marking on a Distributed Port Group or Uplink
Port Group
Let traffic flow to virtual machines or physical adapters without additional control related to security or
QoS by disabling the traffic filtering and marking policy.
Note You can enable and set up the traffic filtering and marking policy on a particular port. See Enable
Traffic Filtering and Marking on a Distributed Port or Uplink Port.
Procedure
1 Locate a distributed port group or an uplink port group in the vSphere Web Client.
a Select a distributed switch and click the Networks tab.
b Click Distributed Port Groups to see the list of distributed port groups, or click Uplink Port
Groups to see the list of uplink port groups.
2 Right-click the port group and select Edit Settings.
3 Select Traffic filtering and marking.
4 From the Status drop-down menu, select Disabled.
5 Click OK.
Trac Filtering and Marking on a Distributed Port or Uplink Port
Filter traffic or describe its QoS demands for an individual virtual machine, VMkernel adapter, or physical
adapter by configuring the traffic filtering and marking policy on a distributed port or uplink port.
n
Enable Traffic Filtering and Marking on a Distributed Port or Uplink Port
Enable the traffic filtering and marking policy on a port to configure traffic security and marking on a
virtual machine network adapter, VMkernel adapter, or uplink adapter.
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Mark Traffic on a Distributed Port or Uplink Port
Assign priority tags in a rule for traffic that needs special treatment such as VoIP and streaming
video. You can mark the traffic for a virtual machine, VMkernel adapter, or physical adapter with a
CoS tag in Layer 2 of the network protocol stack or with a DSCP tag in Layer 3.
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Filter Traffic on a Distributed Port or Uplink Port
By using a rule, permit or stop traffic for securing data flows through a virtual machine, a VMkernel
adapter, or a physical adapter.
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Working with Network Traffic Rules on a Distributed Port or Uplink Port
Define traffic rules in a distributed port or uplink port group to introduce a policy for processing traffic
related to a virtual machine or to a physical adapter. You can filter specific traffic or describe its QoS
demands.
vSphere Networking
VMware, Inc. 126