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Displaying egress–queue Statistics
To display the number of transmitted and dropped packets and their rate on the egress queues of an interface, use the following command:
Display the number of packets and number of bytes on the egress-queue prole.
EXEC Privilege mode
show qos statistics egress-queue
Example of show qos statistics egress-queue Command
Pre-Calculating Available QoS CAM Space
Before Dell EMC Networking OS version 7.3.1, there was no way to measure the number of CAM entries a policy-map would consume (the
number of CAM entries that a rule uses is not predictable; from 1 to 16 entries might be used per rule depending upon its complexity).
Therefore, it was possible to apply to an interface a policy-map that requires more entries than are available. In this case, the system writes
as many entries as possible, and then generates an CAM-full error message (shown in the following example). The partial policy-map
conguration might cause unintentional system behavior.
%EX2YD:12 %DIFFSERV-2-DSA_QOS_CAM_INSTALL_FAILED: Not enough space in L3
Cam(PolicyQos) for class 2 (TeGi 12/20) entries on portpipe 1
The test cam-usage command allows you to verify that there are enough available CAM entries before applying a policy-map to an
interface so that you avoid exceeding the QoS CAM space and partial congurations. This command measures the size of the specied
policy-map and compares it to the available CAM space in a partition for a specied port-pipe.
Test the policy-map size against the CAM space for a specic port-pipe or all port-pipes using these commands:
test cam-usage service-policy input policy-map {stack-unit } number port-set number
test cam-usage service-policy input policy-map {stack-unit } all
The output of this command, shown in the following example, displays:
The estimated number of CAM entries the policy-map will consume.
Whether or not the policy-map can be applied.
The number of interfaces in a port-pipe to which the policy-map can be applied.
Specically:
Available CAM — the available number of CAM entries in the specied CAM partition for the specied line card or stack-unit port-
pipe.
Estimated CAM — the estimated number of CAM entries that the policy will consume when it is applied to an interface.
Status — indicates whether the specied policy-map can be completely applied to an interface in the port-pipe.
Allowed — indicates that the policy-map can be applied because the estimated number of CAM entries is less or equal to the
available number of CAM entries. The number of interfaces in the port-pipe to which the policy-map can be applied is given in
parentheses.
Exception — indicates that the number of CAM entries required to write the policy-map to the CAM is greater than the number of
available CAM entries, and therefore the policy-map cannot be applied to an interface in the specied port-pipe.
NOTE
: The show cam-usage command provides much of the same information as the test cam-usage command, but
whether a policy-map can be successfully applied to an interface cannot be determined without rst measuring how many CAM
entries the policy-map would consume; the test cam-usage command is useful because it provides this measurement.
Verify that there are enough available CAM entries.
test cam-usage
Quality of Service (QoS)
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