For egress buffer management in the SLX 9150/Extreme 8520 devices, all ports and all priorities share a buffer pool of approximately 30MB. The buffers are dynamically allocated. If there is only one queue that is congested, it can take up to 66.67% of the shared pool buffer to absorb a large burst. You can view this information as max-bytes through the show tx-queue internet ethernet command. However, as the number of congested queues increases, the shared pool continues to divide. As a result, the number of buffers that a queue can take up continues to become less. You can view the real-time status of the max-bytes that a queue is using by using the show tx-queue internet ethernet command.
For all other devices, during the traffic management (TM) initialization process, TM egress buffer thresholds are configured and set to the values listed in the following tables.The following table shows the egress thresholds for unicast and multicast traffic that are configured during the TM initialization process at the device level.
Threshold | Packet descriptor (PD) flow control (FC) | PD Drop | DB (Data buffers) FC | DB Drop |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicast | 6100 | 6000 | 6100 | 6000 |
Multicast | 26000 | 6000 |
The following table shows the egress thresholds for unicast and multicast traffic that are configured during the TM initialization process at port level on the device.
Threshold | Packet descriptor (PD) flow control (FC) | PD Drop | DB (Data buffers) FC | DB Drop |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicast priority low | 1024 | 4000 | 84 | 6000 |
Unicast priority high | 1024 | 4000 | 84 | 6000 |
Unicast port | 167 | 6000 | 167 | 6000 |
Multicast priority low | 722 | 7220 | ||
Multicast priority high | 722 | 7220 | ||
Multicast port | 135 | 1350 |
Note
The burst size on special CPU ports (202 and 203) is set to 600.