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Sun Ethernet Fabric Operating System

DCB Administration Guide

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Document Information

Using This Documentation

Purpose and Scope

Product Notes

Related Documentation

Acronyms and Abbreviations

CLI Command Modes

Feedback

Support and Accessibility

Protocol Description

DCB Protocol

Priority Group Feature

PFC Feature

Application Protocol Feature

Topology Setup

Configuring DCB

Configuration Specifications

Host Blade Configuration

Switch A

Switch B

Storage Array Server

Configuration Guidelines

Default Settings

Configure DCB Features

Verifying DCB and LLDP Configurations

Determine VLAN Assignment

Determine Whether Interfaces Are Active

Determine Whether LLDP is Running and Recognizing Peers

Enable DCB

Disable DCB

Enable DCB for Each Interface

Disable DCB for Each Interface

Enable and Disable a Specific DCB Feature

Configure the Mode for the DCB Feature

Configure DCB Attributes

Configure LLDP DCBX TLVs

Display DCBX Feature Statistics and Control Information

Display Output of Unstarted DCBX Protocol Exchange

Display Output of DCBX TLV Exchange

Display Output of No TLV Exchange

Clear Feature Statistics

Display Output Showing a Down Link

DCB Protocol

DCB is a term commonly used to describe Ethernet enhancements to improve Ethernet networking and management in data center environments. DCB is a framework that defines the enhancements that are required for switches and endpoints and includes the following features:

This release of the SEFOS DCB feature supports DCB version 1.0.1, as specified by the DCB task group.

DCB features are discovered and exchanged using the DCBX protocol. DCBX uses LLDP to exchange parameters between two converged link peers. The parameters that are exchanged by DCB are packaged into organizationally specific TLVs and sent to the peer through LLDP messages.

The OUI used for the DCBX TLV is 0x001B21. IEEE-defined OUI and DCBX are used when the IEEE DCBX implementation is available. Because DCBX is an acknowledged protocol that uses LLDP, both transmit and receive directions from LLDP must be enabled on the interface that runs DCBX.

In addition to exchanging DCB parameters with the link partner, the local system DCBX entity works closely with the QoS module to configure the scheduling policy, manage bandwidth, and control the priority flow control in the hardware.