Manual Chapter : Configuring Intelligent Traffic Steering

Applies To:

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BIG-IP PEM

  • 12.1.6, 12.1.5, 12.1.4, 12.1.3, 12.1.2, 12.1.1, 12.1.0
Manual Chapter

Configuring Intelligent Traffic Steering

Overview: Configuring intelligent traffic steering

You can use the Policy Enforcement Manager™ to set up the BIG-IP® system to classify and intelligently steer traffic on the network. The system automatically sets up virtual servers for TCP and UDP traffic so that the BIG-IP system can classify the traffic and direct it to one or more steering endpoints based on traffic characteristics.

Note: Common Address Redundancy Protocol (CARP) persistence is supported with PEM forwarding endpoints, for use with service chaining action, when forwarding traffic to a pool.

Task Summary

What is traffic steering?

Policy Enforcement Manager™ provides the ability to intelligently steer traffic based on policy decision made using classification criteria, URL category, flow information, or custom criteria (iRule events). Steering, also called traffic forwarding, can help you police, control and optimize traffic.

You can forward a particular type of traffic to a pool of one or more servers designed to handle that type of traffic, or to a location closer to clients requesting a service. For example, you can send HTTP video traffic to a pool of video delivery optimization servers. You can have one policy option to classify each transaction which allows transaction aware steering. The ability to classify traffic for every transaction is called transactional policy enforcement. The classification per transaction is for HTTP traffic only.

You set up steering by creating an enforcement policy that defines the traffic that you want to send to a particular location or endpoint. Rules in the enforcement policy specify conditions that the traffic must match, and actions for what to do with that traffic. One of the actions you can take is to forward the traffic to a particular endpoint, called a forwarding endpoint.

You can create listeners to set up virtual servers and associate the enforcement policies with the traffic that is sent to them. The system also creates a Policy Enforcement profile that specifies the enforcement policy that the system uses, among other uses, for traffic steering.

Creating a pool

You can create a pool of servers that you can group together to receive and process traffic.
  1. On the Main tab, click Local Traffic > Pools .
    The Pool List screen opens.
  2. Click Create.
    The New Pool screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a unique name for the pool.
  4. Using the New Members setting, add each resource that you want to include in the pool:
    1. (Optional) In the Node Name field, type a name for the node portion of the pool member.
    2. In the Address field, type an IP address.
    3. In the Service Port field, type a port number, or select a service name from the list.
    4. (Optional) In the Priority field, type a priority number.
    5. Click Add.
  5. Click Finished.
  6. Repeat these steps for each pool you want to create.
The new pool appears in the Pools list.

Creating forwarding endpoints

Before you can create an endpoint, you need to create a pool that specifies where you want to direct the classified traffic.
To set up traffic steering, you need to create a forwarding endpoint, which specifies where to send the traffic. If you are configuring w-steering or service chains, you need to create multiple endpoints.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Forwarding > Endpoints .
    The Endpoints screen opens.
  2. Click Create.
    The New Endpoint screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a name for the endpoint.
  4. From the Pool list, select the pool to which you want to steer a particular type of traffic, for example, in a policy rule.
  5. If you want to translate the destination address of the virtual server to that of the pool, from the Address Translation list, select Enabled. Otherwise, leave this setting disabled.
  6. If you want to translate the original destination port to another port, from the Port Translation list, select Enabled. Otherwise, leave this setting disabled.
  7. From the Source Port list, select the appropriate option for the source port of the connection.
    Option Description
    Preserve Maintains the value configured for the source port, unless the source port from a particular SNAT is already in use.
    Preserve Strict Maintains the value configured for the source port. If the port is in use, the system does not process the connection. Use this setting only when (1) the port is configured for UDP traffic; (2) the system is configured for nPath routing or running in transparent mode; or (3) a one-to-one relationship exists between virtual IP addresses and node addresses, or clustered multi-processing (CMP) is disabled.
    Change Specifies that the system changes the source port.
  8. To specify a SNAT pool for address translation, from the SNAT Pool list, select the name of an existing SNAT pool.
    The steering endpoint uses the SNAT pool to implement selective and intelligent SNATs.
  9. If you have multiple pool members and want specific traffic to go to the same pool member every time, from the Persistence list, select the appropriate IP address type:
    Option Description
    Hash Settings Map the hash value to a specific pool member so that other traffic, with the same hash value, is directed to the same pool member.
    Source Address Map the source IP address to a specific pool member so that subsequent traffic from this address is directed to the same pool member.
    Destination Address Map the destination IP address to a specific pool member so that subsequent traffic from this address is directed to the same pool member.
    If you do not need to maintain persistence, leave Persistence set to Disabled, the default value.
  10. If you select Hash Settings, configure the following fields:
    • To specify a algorithm for the hash persistence method, from the Hash Persistence Algorithm list, select the name of an algorithm. The CARP algorithm is the only options available currently.
    • In the Hash Persistence Offset field, type the offset from start of the source string to calculate the hash value. The default value is 0.
    • In the Hash Persistence Length field, type the length of the source string used to calculate the hash value. The default value is 1024.
  11. From the Hash source list, select the appropriate method to get the hash value.
    Option Description
    URI Specify the string value to calculate hash value.
    Execute Script Specify the script for TCL script snippet. You can select the Wrap Area Text check box to wrap the definition text, and select the Extend Area check box to increase the field space of format scripts.
    The results from this script are used to calculate the hash value.
    Note: The URI option is for HTTP traffic only.
  12. If you want to apply fallback persistence method that is applied when default persistence fails, from the Fallback Persistence list, select the appropriate IP address type:
    Option Description
    Disabled Disables fallback persistence. The default value is Disabled.
    Source Address Map the source IP address to a specific pool member so that subsequent traffic from this address is directed to the same pool member.
    Destination Address Map the destination IP address to a specific pool member so that subsequent traffic from this address is directed to the same pool member.
  13. Click Finished.
You can direct traffic to the endpoint you created in the policy rules of an enforcement policy.

Creating an enforcement policy

If you want to classify and intelligently steer traffic, you need to create an enforcement policy. The policy describes what to do with specific traffic, and how to treat the traffic.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click Create.
    The New Policy screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a name for the policy.
    Tip: When creating policies you plan to apply globally or to unknown subscribers, it is a good idea to include the word global or unknown in the policy name to distinguish these from other subscriber policies.
  4. From the Transactional list, select Enabled if you want the BIG-IP system to allow policy enforcement on each HTTP transaction.
  5. Click Finished.
    Important: The system performance is significantly affected, depending on complexity of the classification and the type of policy action.
    The new enforcement policy is added to the policy list.
Now you must add rules to the enforcement policy to define traffic filters and actions.

Creating custom action policies

In an enforcement policy, custom action can be defined by a Policy Enforcement Manager™ (PEM™) iRule.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies > iRules .
  2. Click Create.
    The New iRule screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a name for the new iRule.
  4. In the Description field, type a description of the new iRule.
  5. In the iRule Expression field, specify the TCL syntax that defines a custom iRule action, which can be later attached to a policy enforcement rule.
    when PEM_POLICY { if {[PEM::policy initial]} 
              { /* Commands to run during the first time the policy is evaluated. */ 
              } else 
              { /* Commands to run during policy re-evaluation. */ } 
              /* Commands to run during policy eval and re-eval time. */ } 
    There can be two iRule events:
    • PEM_POLICY is triggered when a policy evaluation occurs.
    • RULE_INIT runs the first time the iRule is loaded or has changed.
    The two new PEM iRule commands are PEM::policy initial and PEM::policy name. You can select the Wrap Text check box to wrap the definition text, and select the Extend Text Area check box to increase the field space of format scripts.
  6. Click Finished.
    The Policy Enforcement Manager creates a new iRule, and displays the iRule list.
  7. To attach a custom action to a specific iRule, follow the steps:
    1. Click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    2. Select a policy name.
    3. Click a policy rule.
    4. From the Custom Action list, select a iRule created.
  8. Click Update.
You have created a custom action in a policy, using iRules.
Note: The iRule actions are executed at the end of all the other policy actions.

Adding rules to an enforcement policy

Before you can add rules to an enforcement policy, you need to create the policy, then reopen it.
You add rules to an enforcement policy to select the traffic you want to affect, and the actions to take. A rule associates an action with a specific type of traffic. So you can, for example, add a rule to select all audio-video traffic and send it to a pool of servers that are optimized to handle that type of traffic.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click the name of the enforcement policy you want to add rules to.
    The properties screen for the policy opens.
  3. In the Policy Rules area, click Add.
    The New Rule screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a name for the rule.
  5. In the Precedence field, type an integer that indicates the precedence for the rule in relation to the other rules. Number 1 has the highest precedence. Rules with higher precedence are evaluated before other rules with lower precedence.
    Tip: All rules in a policy are run concurrently. Precedence takes effect when there are conflicting rules. The conflict occurs when the traffic matches two rules and the policy actions from these rules differ. For example, if you have rule 1 with precedence 10 and Gate Status disabled for a search engine, and you have rule 2 with precedence 11 and Gate Status enabled, then rule 1 is processed first because it has higher precedence. Rules conflict if they have identical or overlapping classification criteria (for the traffic that matches more than one rule). In some cases, different policy actions are not conflicting, and hence, applied in parallel.
  6. Use the Classification, URL, Flow, and Custom Criteria tabs to identify the traffic that you want to be affected by this rule.
  7. From the Modify Header list, select Enabled, to modify the HTTP request header.
    More modify header configuration options display.
  8. Use the Reporting, Quota, Forwarding, Modify Header or QoS areas to specify what you want to do with the traffic that you are classifying or specify what actions you want to apply to the traffic.
    Other tasks describe how to do this in detail.
    If you leave Gate Status enabled (default) and specify no other actions, the system stores traffic classification statistics on the BIG-IP system, and forwards the traffic to its destination without any further action.
  9. From the Congestion Detection list, select Enable, to congestion detection in the Radio Access Network.
    1. In the Threshold field, type the lower threshold bandwidth for a session. The default value is 1000kbs.
    2. ForDestination list, select the publisher name from the HSL publisher drop-down list.
    The state of congestion detection is now controlled by policy application, and different subsets of subscribers can have different settings. This enables congestion-detection for specific types of applications as it pairs with specific policy rule conditions.
  10. Click Finished.
  11. Repeat steps 3-8 to create as many rules as needed to handle the traffic you are interested in.
The enforcement policy includes the rules with the conditions and actions you added.
Now you need to associate the enforcement policy with the virtual server (or servers) to which traffic is directed.

Creating a rule using classification criteria

You can use Layer 7 classification criteria to define conditions that the traffic must meet (or not meet) for an enforcement policy rule to apply.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click the name of the enforcement policy you want to add rules to.
    The properties screen for the policy opens.
  3. In the Policy Rules area, click Add.
    The New Rule screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a name for the rule.
  5. In the Precedence field, type an integer that indicates the precedence for the rule in relation to the other rules. Number 1 has the highest precedence. Rules with higher precedence are evaluated before other rules with lower precedence.
    Tip: All rules in a policy are run concurrently. Precedence takes effect when there are conflicting rules. The conflict occurs when the traffic matches two rules and the policy actions from these rules differ. For example, if you have rule 1 with precedence 10 and Gate Status disabled for a search engine, and you have rule 2 with precedence 11 and Gate Status enabled, then rule 1 is processed first because it has higher precedence. Rules conflict if they have identical or overlapping classification criteria (for the traffic that matches more than one rule). In some cases, different policy actions are not conflicting, and hence, applied in parallel.
  6. On the Classification tab, in the Classification setting, specify Layer 7 matching criteria for the rule:
    1. From the Match Criteria list, select whether you want perform actions on traffic that matches (select Match), or does not match (select No Match) the criteria specified.
    2. From the Category list, select the type of traffic this rule applies to, or select Any for all traffic.
    3. Some categories have specific applications associated with them. If this one does, from the Application list select the application this rule applies to, or select Any for all traffic in this category.
    4. Click Add to add this match criteria to the classification.
      Add as many matching criteria as are relevant to this rule.
  7. Use the Reporting, Quota, Forwarding, Modify Header or QoS areas to specify what you want to do with the traffic that you are classifying or specify what actions you want to apply to the traffic.
    Other tasks describe how to do this in detail.
    If you leave Gate Status enabled (default) and specify no other actions, the system stores traffic classification statistics on the BIG-IP system, and forwards the traffic to its destination without any further action.
  8. Click Finished.
You have created a rule that applies to traffic based on classification criteria.

Creating a rule using URL categorization

You have the ability to enforce policies that are configured as part of the subscriber profile, based on the URL category type. Use Layer 7 criteria to define conditions that the traffic must meet (or not meet) for an enforcement policy rule to apply.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click the name of the enforcement policy you want to add rules to.
    The properties screen for the policy opens.
  3. In the Policy Rules area, click Add.
    The New Rule screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a name for the rule.
  5. In the Precedence field, type an integer that indicates the precedence for the rule in relation to the other rules. Number 1 has the highest precedence. Rules with higher precedence are evaluated before other rules with lower precedence.
    Tip: All rules in a policy are run concurrently. Precedence takes effect when there are conflicting rules. The conflict occurs when the traffic matches two rules and the policy actions from these rules differ. For example, if you have rule 1 with precedence 10 and Gate Status disabled for a search engine, and you have rule 2 with precedence 11 and Gate Status enabled, then rule 1 is processed first because it has higher precedence. Rules conflict if they have identical or overlapping classification criteria (for the traffic that matches more than one rule). In some cases, different policy actions are not conflicting, and hence, applied in parallel.
  6. On the URL tab, in the URL setting, specify Layer 7 matching criteria for the rule :
    1. From the Match Criteria list, select whether you want perform actions on traffic that matches (select Match), or does not match (select No Match) the criteria specified.
    2. From the URL Category list, select the type of traffic this rule applies to.
    3. Click Add to add this match criteria to the classification.
      Add as many matching criteria as are relevant to this rule.
  7. Use the Reporting, Quota, Forwarding, Modify Header or QoS areas to specify what you want to do with the traffic that you are classifying or specify what actions you want to apply to the traffic.
    Other tasks describe how to do this in detail.
    If you leave Gate Status enabled (default) and specify no other actions, the system stores traffic classification statistics on the BIG-IP system, and forwards the traffic to its destination without any further action.
  8. Click Finished.
You have created a rule that applies to traffic based on URL Category.

Modifying iRule event for URL categories

On the BIG-IP® system, you can modify iRules® Event settings for URL categories.
  1. On the Main tab, click Traffic Intelligence > URL Categorization > Categories .
  2. Select a URL category.
    The URL Properties screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a unique name for the URL category policy.
  4. In the Description field, type optional descriptive text for the classification presets.
  5. In the Category ID field, type an identifier for this category, a unique number.
  6. In the iRule Event field, select the appropriate setting.
    • To trigger an iRule event for this category of traffic, select Enabled. You can then create an iRule that performs an action on this type of traffic.
    • If you do not need to trigger an iRule event for this category of traffic, select Disabled.
    Note: CLASSIFICATION::DETECTED is the only event that is supported.
You have modified an iRule event setting for an existing URL category.

Creating a rule using flow conditions

You can use flow information to define conditions that the traffic must meet (or not meet) for an enforcement policy rule to apply.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click the name of the enforcement policy you want to add rules to.
    The properties screen for the policy opens.
  3. In the Policy Rules area, click Add.
    The New Rule screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a name for the rule.
  5. In the Precedence field, type an integer that indicates the precedence for the rule in relation to the other rules. Number 1 has the highest precedence. Rules with higher precedence are evaluated before other rules with lower precedence.
    Tip: All rules in a policy are run concurrently. Precedence takes effect when there are conflicting rules. The conflict occurs when the traffic matches two rules and the policy actions from these rules differ. For example, if you have rule 1 with precedence 10 and Gate Status disabled for a search engine, and you have rule 2 with precedence 11 and Gate Status enabled, then rule 1 is processed first because it has higher precedence. Rules conflict if they have identical or overlapping classification criteria (for the traffic that matches more than one rule). In some cases, different policy actions are not conflicting, and hence, applied in parallel.
  6. On the Flow tab, in the Flow setting, specify Layer 4 conditions that the traffic must meet (or not meet) for this rule to apply.
    Option Description
    Match Select whether you want to perform actions on traffic that matches (select Match) or does not match (select No Match) the criteria specified.
    DSCP Marking To match incoming traffic based on a DSCP value, type an integer from 0 to 63.
    Protocol To specify the applicable traffic by protocol, select UDP, TCP, or leave the default value of Any.
    IP Type To specify the IP address type that this rule applies to, select IPv4, IPv6, or leave the default value of Any.
    Source Address/Mask To match incoming traffic based on the address or network it is coming from, type the source IP address/netmask of the network you want the rule to affect. The default value is 0.0.0.0/32.
    Source Port To match incoming traffic based on the port it is coming from, type the port number you want the rule to affect. The default value (empty) matches traffic from all ports.
    Source VLAN To match incoming traffic based on the VLAN, select a previously configured VLAN.
    Destination Address/Mask To match traffic based on the address or network it is directed to, type the source IP address/netmask of the network you want the rule to affect. The default value is 0.0.0.0/32.
    Destination Port To match incoming traffic based on the port it is directed to, type the port number you want the rule to affect. The default value (empty) matches traffic headed to all ports.
    1. Click Add to add this match criteria to the classification.
      Tip: F5® recommends that you keep the matching criteria in a rule simple, adding more rules to specify additional conditions rather than including too many in one rule.
  7. Use the Reporting, Quota, Forwarding, Modify Header or QoS areas to specify what you want to do with the traffic that you are classifying or specify what actions you want to apply to the traffic.
    Other tasks describe how to do this in detail.
    If you leave Gate Status enabled (default) and specify no other actions, the system stores traffic classification statistics on the BIG-IP system, and forwards the traffic to its destination without any further action.
  8. Click Finished.
You have created a rule that classifies traffic.

Creating a rule for forwarding traffic

You can create a rule that forwards traffic to an endpoint. For example, you might want to direct video traffic to a server that is optimized for video viewing.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click the name of the enforcement policy you want to add rules to.
    The properties screen for the policy opens.
  3. In the Policy Rules area, click Add.
    The New Rule screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a name for the rule.
  5. In the Precedence field, type an integer that indicates the precedence for the rule in relation to the other rules. Number 1 has the highest precedence. Rules with higher precedence are evaluated before other rules with lower precedence.
    Tip: All rules in a policy are run concurrently. Precedence takes effect when there are conflicting rules. The conflict occurs when the traffic matches two rules and the policy actions from these rules differ. For example, if you have rule 1 with precedence 10 and Gate Status disabled for a search engine, and you have rule 2 with precedence 11 and Gate Status enabled, then rule 1 is processed first because it has higher precedence. Rules conflict if they have identical or overlapping classification criteria (for the traffic that matches more than one rule). In some cases, different policy actions are not conflicting, and hence, applied in parallel.
  6. Use the Classification, URL, Flow, and Custom Criteria tabs to identify the traffic that you want to be affected by this rule.
  7. In the Gate area, for Gate Status, select Enabled.
    Options provide several ways to forward the traffic.
  8. In the Forwarding area, for HTTP Redirect, select Enabled, and type the URL.
  9. From the Forwarding list, select an option where you would like to forward the traffic.
    Options Description
    Route to Network The traffic flow is forwarded to the default destination.
    Forwarding to Endpoint The flow is steered to a different destination and you can select one of the endpoints.
    Forward to ICAP virtual Server The flow is forwarded to the ICAP virtual server.
  10. From the Forwarding Fallback Action list, select Drop or Continue to specify if the connection can remain unchanged or should be dropped if the forwarding action fails.
  11. From the ICAP Virtual Server list, select an internal virtual server that you have created, or click Create to create a new internal virtual server.
  12. From the ICAP Type list, select an ICAP adaptation type.
    • Select Request to send a portion of the request to the ICAP server.
    • Select Response to receive a portion of the response from the ICAP server.
    • Select Request and Response to have both types of adaptation.
  13. From the Service Chain list, select Create to direct traffic to more than one location (such as value-added services).
  14. Click Finished.
You have created a rule that forwards traffic.

Creating a rule for QoS

Before you can create a rule for Quality of Service (QoS), you need to create a bandwidth controller to use rate control.
You can create a rule that results in a QoS action such as DSCP marking, link QoS, or rate limiting.
Note:
In the mobile market, uplink and downlink is sometimes known as forward and reverse respectively.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Policies .
    The Policies screen opens.
  2. Click the name of the enforcement policy you want to add rules to.
    The properties screen for the policy opens.
  3. In the Policy Rules area, click Add.
    The New Rule screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a name for the rule.
  5. In the Precedence field, type an integer that indicates the precedence for the rule in relation to the other rules. Number 1 has the highest precedence. Rules with higher precedence are evaluated before other rules with lower precedence.
    Tip: All rules in a policy are run concurrently. Precedence takes effect when there are conflicting rules. The conflict occurs when the traffic matches two rules and the policy actions from these rules differ. For example, if you have rule 1 with precedence 10 and Gate Status disabled for a search engine, and you have rule 2 with precedence 11 and Gate Status enabled, then rule 1 is processed first because it has higher precedence. Rules conflict if they have identical or overlapping classification criteria (for the traffic that matches more than one rule). In some cases, different policy actions are not conflicting, and hence, applied in parallel.
  6. Use the Classification, URL, Flow, and Custom Criteria tabs to identify the traffic that you want to be affected by this rule.
  7. For Gate Status, select Enabled.
    If you select Disabled, then the corresponding traffic will be dropped.
    Forwarding and QoS options are displayed.
  8. To set DSCP bits on the downlink traffic, for IP Marking (DSCP), select Specify, and type a value between 0 and 63, inclusive.
    The traffic that matches this rule is marked with this value.
  9. To set DSCP bits on the uplink traffic, for IP Marking (DSCP), select Specify, and type a value between 0 and 63, inclusive.
    The traffic that matches this rule is marked with this value.
  10. To set a Layer 2 Quality of Service (QoS) level in downlink packets, for L2 Marking (802.1p), select Specify, and type a value between 0 and 7, inclusive.
    Setting a QoS level affects the packet delivery priority.
  11. To set a Layer 2 Quality of Service (QoS) level in uplink packets, for L2 Marking (802.1p), select Specify, and type a value between 0 and 7, inclusive.
    Setting a QoS level affects the packet delivery priority.
  12. To apply rate control to downlink traffic, in the Bandwidth Controller setting, select the name of a bandwidth control policy.
    Note: You can assign any previously created static or dynamic bandwidth control policies. However, F5® does not recommend using the default-bwc-policy, which the system provides, nor the dynamic_spm_bwc_policy, which you can create to enforce dynamic QoS settings provisioned by the PCRF.
    Depending on the bandwidth control policy, PEM™ restricts bandwidth usage per subscriber, group of subscribers, per application, per network egress link, or any combination of these.
  13. To apply rate control to uplink traffic and per category of application, in the Bandwidth Controller setting, select the name of a bandwidth control policy.
    Note: You can assign any previously created static or dynamic bandwidth control policies. However, we do not recommend using the default-bwc-policy, which the system provides, nor the dynamic_spm_bwc_policy, which you can create for communicating with the PCRF.
    Depending on the bandwidth control policy, PEM restricts bandwidth usage per subscriber, group of subscribers, per application, per network egress link, per category of applications or any combination of these.
  14. Click Finished.
You have created a rule that manages QoS traffic.

Creating a data plane virtual group

If you want to steer specific traffic (or otherwise regulate certain types of traffic) you must first develop appropriate enforcement policies. If using a Gx interface to a PCRF, you need to create a new virtual group in listeners that connect to a PCRF.
You can create listeners that specify how to handle traffic for policy enforcement. Creating a listener performs preliminary setup on the BIG-IP® system for application visibility, intelligent steering, bandwidth management, and reporting.
  1. On the Main tab, click Policy Enforcement > Listeners .
    The Listeners screen opens.
  2. Click Data Plane.
    The Data Plane screen opens.
  3. Click Add Group.
    The New Virtual Group screen opens.
  4. In the Name field, type a unique name for the listener.
  5. In the Destination Address field, type the IP address of the virtual server. For example, 10.0.0.1 or 10.0.0.0/24.
    Note: When you use an IPv4 address without specifying a prefix, the BIG-IP® system automatically uses a /32 prefix.
    Tip: You can use a catch-all virtual server (0.0.0.0) to specify all traffic that is delivered to the BIG-IP® system. Configure the source and destination setting, during forwarding mode only. In the relay mode, the client does not have an IP address and the DHCP provides the client with an IP address.
    The system will create a virtual server using the address or network you specify.
  6. For the Service Port setting, type or select the service port for the virtual server.
  7. From the VLAN and Tunnel Traffic list, select Enabled on. Then, for the VLANs and Tunnels setting, move the VLAN or VLANs on which you want to allow the virtual servers to share traffic from the Available list to the Selected list.
  8. For the VLANs and Tunnels setting, move the VLANs and tunnels that you want to monitor from the Available list to the Selected list.
  9. In the Policy Provisioning area, select enforcement policies to apply to the traffic.
    1. For Global Policy, move policies to apply to all subscribers to High Precedence or Low Precedence.
      Note: For URL categorization to take effect, you need to associate the enforcement policy with a classification profile.
    2. For Unknown Subscriber Policy, move policies to use if the subscriber is unknown to Selected.
    The system applies the global policy to all subscribers in parallel with the subscriber policies, and must be configured with unknown subscriber policy. High-precedence global policies override conflicting subscriber policies, and low-precedence policies are overridden by conflicting subscriber policies.
  10. Click Finished.
    The Policy Enforcement Manager creates a listener.
When you create a listener, Policy Enforcement Manager™ also creates virtual servers for each type of traffic (TCP, UDP, or both and IP), and a virtual server for HTTP traffic. The system sets up classification and assigns the appropriate policy enforcement profile to the virtual servers. If you are connecting to a RADIUS authentication server, a virtual server for RADIUS is also added.
Now you can send traffic through the network. As network traffic moves through the BIG-IP® system, the system classifies the traffic, and if you have developed policies, the system performs the actions specified by the enforcement policy rules.