Users Guide

4 Alternatively, congure the committed rate and committed burst size in bytes.
QOS-POLICY-OUT mode
Dell(config-qos-policy-out)# rate shape Kbps peak-rate burst-KB committed Kbps committed-rate
burst-KB
Conguring Weights and ECN for WRED
The feature to congure a weight factor for weighted random early detection (WRED) and Explicit Congestion Notication (ECN)
functionality for backplane ports is supported on the Additionally, the feature to congure a weight for WRED and ECN functionality for
front-end ports is supported on the Dell Networking OS.
The WRED congestion avoidance functionality drops packets to prevent buering resources from being consumed. Trac is a mixture of
various kinds of packets. The rate at which some types of packets arrive might be greater than others. In this case, the space on the buer
and trac manager (BTM) (ingress or egress) can be consumed by only one or few types of trac, leaving no space for other types. You
can apply a WRED prole to a policy-map so that the specied trac can be prevented from consuming too much of the BTM resources.
WRED drops packets when the average queue length exceeds the congured threshold value to signify congestion. ECN is a capability that
enhances WRED by marking the packets instead of causing WRED to drop them when the threshold value is exceeded. If you congure
ECN for WRED, devices employ ECN to mark the packets and reduce the rate of sending packets in a congested network.
In a best-eort network topology, data packets are transmitted in a manner in which latency or throughput is not maintained to be at an
eective level. Packets are dropped when the network experiences a large trac load. This best-eort network deployment is not suitable
for applications that are time-sensitive, such as video on demand (VoD) or voice over IP (VoIP) applications. In such cases, you can use
ECN in conjunction with WRED to resolve the dropping of packets under congested conditions.
Using ECN, the packets are marked for transmission at a later time after the network recovers from the heavy trac state to an optimal
load. In this manner, enhanced performance and throughput are achieved. Also, the devices can respond to congestion before a queue
overows and packets are dropped, enabling improved queue management.
When a packet reaches the device with ECN enabled for WRED, the average queue size is computed. To measure the average queue size,
a weight factor is used. This weight factor is user-congurable. You can use the wred weight number command to congure the
weight for the WRED average queue size. The mark probability value is the number of packets dropped when the average queue size
reaches the maximum threshold value.
The weight factor is set to zero by default, which causes the same behavior as dropping of packets by WRED during network loads or also
called instantaneous ECN marking. In a topology in which congestion of the network varies over time, you can specify a weight to enable a
smooth, seamless averaging of packets to handle the sudden overload of packets based on the previous time sampling performed. You can
specify the weight parameter for front-end and backplane ports separately in the range of 0 through 15.
You can enable WRED and ECN capabilities per queue for granularity. You can disable these functionality per queue, and you can also
specify the minimum and maximum buer thresholds for each color-coding of the packets. You can congure maximum drop rate
percentage of yellow and green proles. You can set up these parameters for both front-end and backplane ports.
Global Service Pools With WRED and ECN Settings
A global buer pool, which is a shared buer pool accessed by multiple queues when the minimum guaranteed buers for the queue are
consumed, can be congured on the system. Support for global service pools is now available. You can congure global service pools that
are shared buer pools accessed by multiple queues when the minimum guaranteed buers for the queue are consumed. The platform
supports four global service-pools in the egress direction. Two service pools are used– one for loss-based queues and the other for lossless
(priority-based ow control (PFC)) queues. You can enable WRED and ECN conguration on the global service-pools.
Quality of Service (QoS)
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