Users Guide

PFC enabled or disabled
No bandwidth limit or no ETS processing
ETS uses the DCB MIB IEEE 802.1azd2.5.
Data Center Bridging Exchange Protocol (DCBx)
DCBx allows a switch to automatically discover DCB-enabled peers and exchange configuration information. PFC and ETS use DCBx to
exchange and negotiate parameters with peer devices. DCBx capabilities include:
Discovery of DCB capabilities on peer-device connections.
Determination of possible mismatch in DCB configuration on a peer link.
Configuration of a peer device over a DCB link.
DCBx requires the link layer discovery protocol (LLDP) to provide the path to exchange DCB parameters with peer devices. Exchanged
parameters are sent in organizationally specific TLVs in LLDP data units. The following LLDP TLVs are supported for DCB parameter
exchange:
PFC parameters PFC Configuration TLV and Application Priority Configuration TLV.
ETS parameters ETS Configuration TLV and ETS Recommendation TLV.
Data Center Bridging in a Traffic Flow
The following figure shows how DCB handles a traffic flow on an interface.
Figure 30. DCB PFC and ETS Traffic Handling
Enabling Data Center Bridging
DCB is automatically configured when you configure FCoE or iSCSI optimization.
Data center bridging supports converged enhanced Ethernet (CEE) in a data center network. DCB is disabled by default. It must be
enabled to support CEE.
Priority-based flow control
Enhanced transmission selection
Data center bridging exchange protocol
FCoE initialization protocol (FIP) snooping
DCB processes virtual local area network (VLAN)-tagged packets and dot1p priority values. Untagged packets are treated with a dot1p
priority of 0.
Data Center Bridging (DCB)
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