CLI Guide
the same priority group. For example, the priority-pgid 0 0 0 1 2 4 4 4
command creates the following groups of 802.1p priority traffic:
• Priority group 0 contains traffic with dot1p priorities 0, 1, and 2.
• Priority group 1 contains traffic with dot1p priority 3.
• Priority group 2 contains traffic with dot1p priority 4.
• Priority group 4 contains traffic with dot1p priority 5, 6, and 7.
To remove a priority-pgid configuration from a DCB map, enter the no
priority-pgid
command.
For PFC enabled priorities, it is recommended to map single priority per Priority
group.
priority-group bandwidth pfc
Configure the ETS bandwidth allocation and PFC mode used to manage port traffic in an 802.1p priority
group.
Syntax
priority-group group-num {bandwidth percentage| strict-
priority} [[committed | peak ] | [peak | committed] {<0-10000>}
[<0-10000>]] pfc {on | off}
Parameters
priority-group
group-num
Enter the keyword priority-group followed by the
number of an 802.1p priority group. Use the priority-
pgid
command to create the priority groups in a DCB map.
bandwidth
percentage
Enter the keyword bandwidth followed by a bandwidth
percentage allocated to the priority group. The range of
valid values is 1 to 100. The sum of all allocated bandwidth
percentages in priority groups in a DCB map must be 100%.
strict-priority Configure the priority-group traffic to be handled with strict
priority scheduling. Strict-priority traffic is serviced first,
before bandwidth allocated to other priority groups is made
available.
pfc {on | off} Configure whether priority-based flow control is enabled
(on) or disabled (off) for port traffic in the priority group.
Defaults None
Command Modes DCB MAP
Command History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms,
see the relevant Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
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Data Center Bridging (DCB)










