Preserving 802.1 P Value Across Vxlan Tunnels - Dell S6100 Configuration Manual

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Admin State
: Up
Local vtep ip
: 101.101.101.101
Port List
: Fo 0/116
The following example displays VTEP to VNI mapping for a specific remote VTEP.
Dell# show vxlan vxlan-instance 1 vtep-vni-map
Remote Vtep IP
: 10.10.10.10
VNI profile
: Profile1
VNID count
: 4
VNID list
: 100, 200, 300, 400
Remote Vtep IP
: 10.10.10.11
VNI profile
: Profile2
VNID count
: 3
VNID list
: 100, 200, 500
The following example displays VXLAN statistics for a specific port and VLAN combination.
Dell# show vxlan statistics interface te 0/0 vlan 2
Statistics for Port : Te 0/0
Rx Packets
: 0
Rx Bytes
: 0
Tx Packets
: 0
Tx Bytes
: 0
The following example displays VXLAN statistics for the specified VXLAN tunnel.
Dell# 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.
Dell# 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 VTEP—VXLAN 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.
Vlan : 2
Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN)
1005

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