Configuring Data Center Bridging Features
985
Priority Flow Control
Ordinarily, when flow control is enabled on a physical link, it applies to all
traffic on the link. When congestion occurs, the hardware sends pause frames
that temporarily suspend traffic flow to help prevent buffer overflow and
dropped frames.
PFC provides a means of pausing individual priorities within a single physical
link. By pausing the congested priority or priorities independently, protocols
that are highly loss-sensitive can share the same link with traffic that has
different loss tolerances.
This feature is used in networks where the traffic has differing loss tolerances.
For example, Fibre Channel traffic is highly sensitive to traffic loss. If a link
contains both loss-sensitive data and other less loss-sensitive data, the loss-
sensitive data should use a no-drop priority that is enabled for flow control.
Priorities are differentiated by the priority field of the IEEE 802.1Q VLAN
header, which identifies an IEEE 802.1p priority value. These priority values
must be mapped to internal class-of-service (CoS) values.
The PFC feature allows you to specify the CoS values that should be paused
(due to greater loss sensitivity) instead of dropped when congestion occurs on
a link. Unless configured as no-drop, all CoS priorities are considered non-
pausable (“drop”) when priority-based flow control is enabled until no-drop is
specifically turned on.
PFC Operation and Behavior
PFC uses a control packet newly defined in IEEE 802.1Qbb and, therefore, is
not compatible with IEEE 802.3 Annex 31B flow control. An interface that is
configured for PFC is automatically disabled for flow control. When PFC is
disabled on an interface, the flow control configuration for the interface
becomes active. Any IEEE 802.3 Annex 31B link-layer flow-control frames
received on a PFC configured interface are ignored.
Each priority is configured as either
drop
or
no-drop
. If a priority that is
designated as no-drop is congested, the priority is paused. Drop priorities do
not participate in pause. You must configure the same no-drop priorities and
enable VLAN tagging for the no-drop priorities across the network to ensure
end-to-end lossless behavior.
Summary of Contents for N2000 Series
Page 50: ...50 Contents ...
Page 54: ...54 Introduction ...
Page 134: ...134 Using Dell OpenManage Switch Administrator ...
Page 168: ...168 Setting Basic Network Information ...
Page 206: ...206 Managing a Switch Stack ...
Page 242: ...242 Configuring Authentication Authorization and Accounting ...
Page 318: ...318 Managing General System Settings Figure 12 24 Verify MOTD ...
Page 322: ...322 Managing General System Settings ...
Page 358: ...358 Configuring SNMP ...
Page 388: ...388 Managing Images and Files ...
Page 415: ...Monitoring Switch Traffic 415 Figure 16 2 sFlow Agent Summary ...
Page 451: ...Monitoring Switch Traffic 451 5 On the Capture Options dialog click Manage Interfaces ...
Page 458: ...458 Monitoring Switch Traffic ...
Page 488: ...488 Configuring Port Characteristics Figure 18 3 Copy Port Settings 8 Click Apply ...
Page 502: ...502 Configuring Port Characteristics ...
Page 567: ...Configuring Port and System Security 567 Figure 19 38 Captive Portal Client Status ...
Page 674: ...674 Configuring VLANs Figure 21 17 GVRP Port Parameters Table ...
Page 680: ...680 Configuring VLANs Figure 21 24 Double VLAN Port Parameter Table ...
Page 714: ...714 Configuring VLANs ...
Page 737: ...Configuring the Spanning Tree Protocol 737 Figure 22 9 Spanning Tree Global Settings ...
Page 760: ...760 Configuring the Spanning Tree Protocol ...
Page 786: ...786 Discovering Network Devices ...
Page 793: ...Configuring Port Based Traffic Control 793 Figure 24 3 Storm Control 5 Click Apply ...
Page 878: ...878 Configuring Connectivity Fault Management ...
Page 899: ...Snooping and Inspecting Traffic 899 Figure 27 17 DAI Interface Configuration Summary ...
Page 903: ...Snooping and Inspecting Traffic 903 Figure 27 24 Dynamic ARP Inspection Statistics ...
Page 924: ...924 Configuring Link Aggregation Figure 28 7 LAG Hash Summary ...
Page 982: ...982 Configuring Link Aggregation ...
Page 1062: ...1062 Configuring DHCP Server and Relay Settings ...
Page 1096: ...1096 Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features Figure 34 3 DHCP Relay Interface Summary ...
Page 1200: ...1200 Configuring OSPF and OSPFv3 ...
Page 1216: ...1216 Configuring RIP ...
Page 1240: ...1240 Configuring VRRP ...
Page 1291: ...Configuring Differentiated Services 1291 Figure 40 5 DiffServ Class Criteria ...
Page 1336: ...1336 Configuring Auto VoIP ...
Page 1367: ...Managing IPv4 and IPv6 Multicast 1367 Figure 43 20 IGMP Cache Information ...
Page 1422: ...1422 Managing IPv4 and IPv6 Multicast ...
Page 1440: ...1440 System Process Definitions ...
Page 1460: ...Index 1460 ...