Deployment Guide

Use the priority-pgid command to map 802.1p priorities to a priority group. You can assign each 802.1p
priority to only one priority group. A priority group consists of 802.1p priority values that are grouped together for
similar bandwidth allocation and scheduling, and that 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 congure PFC and ETS trac handling for each
priority group in a DCB map.
You can enable PFC on a maximum of two priority queues.
If you congure more than one priority group as strict priority, the higher numbered priority queue is given
preference when scheduling data trac.
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 conguration 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 congure 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
priority-pgidCongures the 802.1p priority trac in a priority group for a DCB map.
priority-pgid
Assign 802.1p priority trac to a priority group in a DCB map.
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 trac in a DCB map.
dot1p1_group-num
dot1p2_group-num
dot1p3_group-num
dot1p4_group-num
dot1p5_group-num
dot1p6_group-num
dot1p7_group-num
Defaults None
Command Modes DCB MAP
Supported Modes Programmable-Mux (PMUX)
120 Data Center Bridging (DCB)