Reference Guide

Table Of Contents
Table 17. DCB Map to an Ethernet Port (continued)
Step Task Command Command Mode
priority command or which is already configured for
lossless queues (pfc no-drop queues command).
Configuring PFC without a DCB Map
In a network topology that uses the default ETS bandwidth allocation (assigns equal bandwidth to each priority), you can also
enable PFC for specific dot1p-priorities on individual interfaces without using a DCB map. This type of DCB configuration is
useful on interfaces that require PFC for lossless traffic, but do not transmit converged Ethernet traffic.
Table 18. Configuring PFC without a DCB Map
Step Task Command Command Mode
1 Enter interface configuration mode on an Ethernet
port.
interface interface-
type}
CONFIGURATION
2 Enable PFC on specified priorities. Range: 0-7. Default:
None.
Maximum number of lossless queues supported on an
Ethernet port: 2.
Separate priority values with a comma. Specify a
priority range with a dash, for example: pfc priority
3,5-7
1. You cannot configure PFC using the pfc
priority command on an interface on which a
DCB map has been applied or which is already
configured for lossless queues (pfc no-drop
queues command).
pfc priority priority-
range
INTERFACE
Configuring Lossless Queues
DCB also supports the manual configuration of lossless queues on an interface when PFC mode is disabled in a DCB map, apply
the map on the interface. The configuration of no-drop queues provides flexibility for ports on which PFC is not needed, but
lossless traffic should egress from the interface.
Configuring no-drop queues is applicable only on the interfaces which do not need PFC.
Example:
Port A > Port B
Port C > Port B
PFC no-drop queues are configured for queues 1, 2 on Port B. PFC capability is enabled on priorities 3, 4 on PORT A and C.
Port B acting as Egress
During the congestion, [traffic pump on priorities 3 and 4 from PORT A and PORT C is at full line rate], PORT A and C send out
the PFCs to rate the traffic limit. Egress drops are not observed on Port B since traffic flow on priorities is mapped to loss less
queues.
Port B acting as Ingress
If the traffic congestion is on PORT B , Egress DROP is on PORT A or C, as the PFC is not enabled on PORT B.
Data Center Bridging (DCB)
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