Reference Guide

dot1p Value in the
Incoming Frame
Egress Queue Assignment
2 0
3 1
4 2
5 3
6 3
7 3
How Priority-Based Flow Control is Implemented
Priority-based flow control provides a flow control mechanism based on the 802.1p priorities in
converged Ethernet traffic received on an interface and is enabled by default. As an enhancement to the
existing Ethernet pause mechanism, PFC stops traffic transmission for specified priorities (CoS values)
without impacting other priority classes. Different traffic types are assigned to different priority classes.
When traffic congestion occurs, PFC sends a pause frame to a peer device with the CoS priority values of
the traffic that needs to be stopped. DCBx provides the link-level exchange of PFC parameters between
peer devices. PFC creates zero-loss links for SAN traffic that requires no-drop service, while at the same
time retaining packet-drop congestion management for LAN traffic.
PFC is implemented on an Aggregator as follows:
If DCB is enabled, as soon as a DCB policy with PFC is applied on an interface, DCBx starts
exchanging information with PFC-enabled peers. The IEEE802.1Qbb, CEE and CIN versions of PFC
TLV are supported. DCBxalso validates PFC configurations received in TLVs from peer devices.
To achieve complete lossless handling of traffic, enable PFC operation on ingress port traffic and on
all DCB egress port traffic.
All 802.1p priorities are enabled for PFC. Queues to which PFC priority traffic is mapped are lossless by
default. Traffic may be interrupted due to an interface flap (going down and coming up).
For PFC to be applied on an Aggregator port, the auto-configured priority traffic must be supported
by a PFC peer (as detected by DCBx).
A DCB input policy for PFC applied to an interface may become invalid if dot1p-queue mapping is
reconfigured (refer to Create Input Policy Maps). This situation occurs when the new dot1p-queue
assignment exceeds the maximum number (2) of lossless queues supported globally on the switch. In
this case, all PFC configurations received from PFC-enabled peers are removed and re-synchronized
with the peer devices.
Dell Networking OS does not support MACsec Bypass Capability (MBC).
How Enhanced Transmission Selection is Implemented
Enhanced transmission selection (ETS) provides a way to optimize bandwidth allocation to outbound
802.1p classes of converged Ethernet traffic. Different traffic types have different service needs. Using
ETS, groups within an 802.1p priority class are auto-configured to provide different treatment for traffic
with different bandwidth, latency, and best-effort needs.
For example, storage traffic is sensitive to frame loss; interprocess communication (IPC) traffic is latency-
sensitive. ETS allows different traffic types to coexist without interruption in the same converged link.
NOTE: The IEEE 802.1Qaz, CEE, and CIN versions of ETS are supported.
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Data Center Bridging (DCB)