Enabling Strict-Priority Queueing; Weighted Random Early Detection - Dell Z9000 Configuration Manual

10/25/40/50/100gbe throughput
Hide thumbs Also See for Z9000:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Enabling Strict-Priority Queueing

Strict-priority means that Dell Networking OS de-queues all packets from the assigned queue before
servicing any other queues.
The strict-priority supersedes bandwidth-percentage configuration.
A queue with strict priority can starve other queues in the same port-pipe.
Assign strict priority to one unicast queue.
CONFIGURATION mode
strict-priority
The range is from 1 to 3.

Weighted Random Early Detection

The WRED congestion avoidance mechanism drops packets to prevent buffering resources from being
consumed.
Traffic is a mixture of various kinds of packets. The rate at which some types of packets arrive might be
greater than others. In this case, the space on the buffer and traffic manager (BTM) (ingress or egress) can
be consumed by only one or a few types of traffic, leaving no space for other types. You can apply a
WRED profile to a policy-map so that specified traffic can be prevented from consuming too much of the
BTM resources.
WRED uses a profile to specify minimum and maximum threshold values. The minimum threshold is the
allotted buffer space for specified traffic, for example, 1000KB on egress. If the 1000KB is consumed,
packets are dropped randomly at an exponential rate until the maximum threshold is reached (as shown
in the following illustration); this procedure is the "early detection" part of WRED. If the maximum
threshold, for example, 2000KB, is reached, all incoming packets are dropped until the buffer space
consumes less than 2000KB of the specified traffic.
670
Quality of Service (QoS)

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents