enable flow-control ports

enable flow-control [tx-pause {priority priority} | rx-pause {qosprofile qosprofile}] ports [all | port_list]

Description

Enables flow control or priority flow control (PFC) on the specified ports.

Syntax Description

tx-pause

Specifies transmit pause frames.

priority

Specifies all priorities or single priorities--dot1p priority for tagged packets and internal priority for untagged packets. Used with priority flow control only.

rx-pause

Specifies received pause frames.

qosprofile

Specifies a QoS profile (“qp1” “qp2” “qp3” “qp4” “qp5” “qp6” “qp7” “qp8”) to pause for priority flow control packet reception. Used with priority flow control only.

all

Specifies all ports or slots.

port_list

Specifies one or more ports or slots and ports.

Default

Disabled.

Usage Guidelines

With autonegotiation enabled, the switches advertise the ability to support pause frames. This includes receiving, reacting to (stopping transmission), and transmitting pause frames. However, the switch does not actually transmit pause frames unless it is configured to do so.

IEEE 802.3x-Flow Control

IEEE 802.3x flow control provides the ability to configure different modes in the default behaviors.

Use this command to configure the switch to transmit link-layer pause frames when congestion is detected. This stops all traffic on the configured port when there is buffer congestion for any traffic type. Use it also to configure the switch to return to the default behavior of processing received pause frames.

To enable TX flow-control, RX flow-control must first be enabled. If you attempt to enable TX flow-control with RX flow-control disabled, an error message is displayed.

IEEE 802.1Qbb-Priority Flow Control

IEEE 802.1Qbb priority flow control provides the ability to configure the switch to transmit link-layer pause frames to stop only a portion of the traffic when congestion is detected.

When IEEE 802.1Qbb priority flow control is enabled on a port, IEEE 802.3x pause functionality is no longer available on that port.

Priority is established for reception of PFC packets with a QoS profile value on the ExtremeXOS switch and for transmission with a priority value added to the PFC packet.
  • QoS profile—Ingress traffic is associated with a QoS profile for assignment to one of eight hardware queues in the system that define how the traffic flows with respect to bandwidth, priority, and other parameters. By default, there are two QoS profiles (QP1 and QP8) defined in these supported platforms and PFC works with this default. To segregate the ingress traffic with more granularity, you will want to define other QoS profiles.

  • Priority—The traffic that is paused is based on the priority bits in the This command is available on the ExtremeSwitching X440-G2, X450-G2, X460-G2, X465, X590, X620, X670-G2, X690, X695, X870, 5320, 5420, 5520 series switches. header for tagged packets. You can specify this transmit priority independently from the QoS profile to associate it with the reception of a PFC packets thus giving flexibility in the configuration of the network.

It is suggested that the priority in the VLAN header match the QoS profile priority when traffic ingresses at the edge of the network so that the traffic can be more easily controlled as it traverses through the network.

IEEE 802.3x

The following command enables the TX flow-control feature on ports 5 through 7 on a switch:

enable flow-control tx-pause ports 5-7

IEEE 802.1Qbb

The following command enables the priority flow control feature on a switch:

enable flow-control tx-pause priority 3 ports 2

History

This command was first available in ExtremeXOS 12.1.3.

IEEE 802.1Qbb priority flow control (PFC) was added in ExtremeXOS 12.5.

Platform Availability

IEEE 802.3x

The basic TX-pause and RX-pause functions of this command are available on all switches.

IEEE 802.1Qbb

The priority function (PFC) is available only on 10G ports.