Configuration manual

low-latency storage or server cluster traffic in a traffic class to receive more bandwidth and restrict best-
effort LAN traffic assigned to a different traffic class.
Although you can configure strict-priority queue scheduling for a priority group, ETS introduces flexibility
that allows the bandwidth allocated to each priority group to be dynamically managed according to the
amount of LAN, storage, and server traffic in a flow. Unused bandwidth is dynamically allocated to
prioritized priority groups. Traffic is queued according to its 802.1p priority assignment, while flexible
bandwidth allocation and the configured queue-scheduling for a priority group is supported.
The following figure shows how ETS allows you to allocate bandwidth when different traffic types are
classed according to 802.1p priority and mapped to priority groups.
Figure 142. Enhanced Transmission Selection
The following table lists the traffic groupings ETS uses to select multiprotocol traffic for transmission.
Table 75. ETS Traffic Groupings
Traffic Groupings Description
Priority group A group of 802.1p priorities used for bandwidth
allocation and queue scheduling. All 802.1p priority
traffic in a group must have the same traffic
handling requirements for latency and frame loss.
Group ID A 4-bit identifier assigned to each priority group.
The range is from 0 to 7.
Group bandwidth Percentage of available bandwidth allocated to a
priority group.
Group transmission selection algorithm (TSA) Type of queue scheduling a priority group uses.
In the Dell Networking OS, ETS is implemented as follows:
ETS supports groups of 802.1p priorities that have:
PFC enabled or disabled
No bandwidth limit or no ETS processing
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FC Flex IO Modules