Service Manual

Table Of Contents
Parameters
pps Enter the keyword pps to specify the rate limit in packets per
second (pps).
kbps Enter the keyword kbps to specify the rate limit in Kilobits per
second (Kbps). Make the following value a multiple of 64. The
range is from 0 to 40000000. The default granularity is Megabits
per second (Mbps).
burst-kbps (OPTIONAL) Enter the burst size in KB. The range is from 0 to
40000. The default is 100.
burst-packets Enter the peak rate or committed rate burst size in packets per
seconds.
Defaults Burst size is 10KB. Granularity for rate is Mbps unless you use the kbps option.
Command Modes QOS-POLICY-OUT
Command History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms, see
the relevant Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
Version Description
9.8(1.0) Introduced on the Z9100-ON.
9.8(0.0P5) Introduced on the S4048-ON.
9.8(0.0P2) Introduced on the S3048-ON.
9.7(0.0) Introduced on the S6000-ON.
9.2(1.0) Introduced on the Z9500.
9.0.2.0 Introduced on the S6000.
8.3.19.0 Introduced on the S4820T.
8.3.11.1 Introduced on the Z9000.
8.3.7.0 Introduced on the S4810.
8.2.1.0 Added the kbps option on the C-Series, E-Series, and S-Series.
7.6.1.0 Introduced on the S-Series.
7.5.1.0 Introduced on the C-Series.
6.1.1.1 Introduced on the E-Series.
Usage Information On 40-port 10G stack-unit if the traffic is shaped between 64 and 1000 Kbs, for some
values, the shaped rate is much less than the value configured.You must configure the
peak rate and peak burst size using the same value: kilobits or packets per second.
Similarly, you must configure the committed rate and committed burst size with the
same measurement. Peak rate refers to the maximum rate for traffic arriving or exiting
an interface under normal traffic conditions. Peak burst size indicates the maximum
size of unused peak bandwidth that is aggregated. This aggregated bandwidth enables
brief durations of burst traffic that exceeds the peak rate and committed burst.
Committed rate refers to the guaranteed bandwidth for traffic entering or leaving the
Quality of Service (QoS) 1589