Users Guide
The following illustration shows how PFC handles traffic congestion by pausing the transmission of incoming traffic with dot1p 
priority 4.
Figure 28. Illustration of Traffic Congestion
The system supports loading two DCB_Config files:
• FCoE converged traffic with priority 3.
• iSCSI storage traffic with priority 4.
In the Dell Networking OS, PFC is implemented as follows:
• PFC is supported on specified 802.1p priority traffic (dot1p 0 to 7) and is configured per interface. However, only four 
lossless queues are supported on an interface: one for Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) converged traffic and one for 
Internet Small Computer System Interface (iSCSI) storage traffic. Configure the same lossless queues on all ports.
• PFC delay constraints place an upper limit on the transmit time of a queue after receiving a message to pause a specified 
priority.
• By default, PFC is enabled on an interface with no dot1p priorities configured. You can configure the PFC priorities if the 
switch negotiates with a remote peer using DCBx
• During DCBx negotiation with a remote peer:
• DCBx communicates with the remote peer by LLDP TLV to determine current policies, such as PFC support and ETS 
bandwidth allocation.
• If DCBx negotiation is not successful (for example, a version or TLV mismatch), DCBx is disabled and PFC or ETS cannot be 
enabled.
• PFC supports buffering to receive data that continues to arrive on an interface while the remote system reacts to the PFC 
operation.
• PFC supports buffering to receive data that continues to arrive on an interface while the remote system reacts to the PFC 
operation.
• PFC uses DCB MIB IEEE 802.1azd2.5 and PFC MIB IEEE 802.1bb-d2.2.
• A dynamic threshold handles intermittent traffic bursts and varies based on the number of PFC priorities contending for 
buffers, while a static threshold places an upper limit on the transmit time of a queue after receiving a message to pause a 
specified priority. PFC traffic is paused only after surpassing both static and dynamic thresholds for the priority specified for 
the port.
• By default, PFC is enabled when you enable DCB. If you have not loaded FCoE_DCB_Config and iSCSI_DCB_Config, DCB is 
disabled. When you enable DCB globally, you cannot simultaneously enable link-level flow control.
• Buffer space is allocated and de-allocated only when you configure a PFC priority on the port.
Enhanced Transmission Selection
Enhanced transmission selection (ETS) supports optimized bandwidth allocation between traffic types in multiprotocol 
(Ethernet, FCoE, SCSI) links.
ETS allows you to divide traffic according to its 802.1p priority into different priority groups (traffic classes) and configure 
bandwidth allocation and queue scheduling for each group to ensure that each traffic type is correctly prioritized and receives 
Data Center Bridging (DCB) 223










