Command Line Reference Guide
share latency and loss requirements. All 802.1p priorities mapped to the same queue must be in
the same priority group.
Repeat the priority-group bandwidth pfc command to configure PFC and ETS
traffic handling for each priority group in a DCB map.
You can enable PFC on a maximum of two priority queues.
If you configure more than one priority group as strict priority, the higher numbered priority
queue is given preference when scheduling data traffic.
If a priority group does not use its allocated bandwidth, the unused bandwidth is made
available to other priority groups.
To remove a priority-group configuration in a DCB map, enter the no priority-group
bandwidth pfc
command.
By default, equal bandwidth is assigned to each dot1p priority in a priority group. Use the
bandwidth parameter to configure the bandwidth percentage assigned to a priority group.
The sum of the bandwidth allocated to all priority groups in a DCB map must be 100% of the
bandwidth on the link. You must allocate at least 1% of the total port bandwidth to each priority
group.
Related
Commands
dcb-map – creates a DCB map to configure PFC and ETS parameters and applies the PFC and
ETS settings on Ethernet ports.
priority-pgid – configures the 802.1p priority traffic in a priority group for a DCB map.
priority-pgid
Assign 802.1p priority traffic to a priority group in a DCB map.
S5000
Syntax
priority-pgid dot1p0_group-num dot1p1_group-num dot1p2_group-
num dot1p3_group-num dot1p4_group-num dot1p5_group-num
dot1p6_group-num dot1p7_group-num
Parameters
dot1p0_group-
num
Enter the priority group number for each 802.1p class of traffic in a
DCB map.
dot1p1_group-
num
dot1p2_group-
num
dot1p3_group-
num
dot1p4_group-
num
dot1p5_group-
num
400