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Rx Packets : 0
Rx Bytes : 0
Tx Packets : 0
Tx Bytes : 0
The following example displays VXLAN statistics for the specied VXLAN tunnel.
DellEMC# show vxlan vxlan-instance 1 statistics remote-vtep-ip 1.1.1.1
Statistics for Remote-vtep-ip : 1.1.1.1
Unicast:
Rx Packets : 0
Rx Bytes : 0
Tx Packets : 0
Tx Bytes : 0
Non-Unicast:
Tx Packets : 0
Tx Bytes : 0
Use the following command to clear the remote VTEP and access port statistics.
DellEMC# clear vxlan vxlan-instance 1 statistics
Preserving 802.1 p value across VXLAN tunnels
The 802.1p QoS marking preservation is supported over the VXLAN tunnel. The 802.1p priority is carried over from the VXLAN tunnel to
the remote VTEPVXLAN tunnel endpoint. The packets egress out to the correct queue based on the priority value. In such a scenario, if
there is any congestion in the queue, the system generates a pause.
Routing in and out of VXLAN tunnels
VXLAN provides a way to extend a VLAN over a Layer3 tunnel (VXLAN tunnel) across data centers.
This functionality can also be extended one step further by enabling routing from a VLAN on one data center to a dierent VLAN on
another data center. This scheme to route in and out of tunnels (RIOT) requires setting up of hardware VTEPs that are capable of routing
over a VXLAN tunnel using a physical loopback conguration.
Physical Loopback for VXLAN RIOT
The following topology shows how VXLAN RIOT can be achieved using physical loopbacks.
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Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN)