While connections are active, use the Netstat ALL/-A command
to display details about the active connections. One piece of information
displayed is the policy rule name. If this name is blank, then the
traffic is not mapped to any active rule. Also, use the Netstat
SLAP/-j command to display QoS policy statistics. The output
shows the time that each policy was last mapped to traffic, and accumulated
statistics for each policy. Monitor these values over time to verify
that new traffic is mapping as expected.
Note: The values
displayed by the Netstat SLAP/-j commands can wrap around
to 0. If some of the values do not seem correct (for example, total
out bytes less than total out bytes in profile), then wrapping has
probably occurred.