lldptool(8) Linux lldptool(8)
NAME
ETS-{CFG|REC} - Show / manipulate ETS TLV configuration
SYNOPSIS
lldptool -t -i ethx -V ETS-CFG <-c CONFIG_ARG ...>
CONFIG_ARG := { enableTx | willing | tsa | up2tc | numtcs | tcbw }
lldptool -T -i ethx -V ETS-CFG CONFIG_ARG=value ...
CONFIG_ARG :=
enableTx = {yes|no} |
willing = {yes|no} |
tsa = tc:{ets|strict|vendor},... |
up2tc = priority:tc,... |
tcbw = bw1,bw2,...
lldptool -t -i ethx -V ETS-REC <-c CONFIG_ARG ...>
lldptool -T -i ethx -V ETS-REC CONFIG_ARG=value ...
CONFIG_ARG :=
enableTx = {yes|no} |
tsa = tc:{ets|strict|vendor},... |
up2tc = priority:tc,... |
tcbw = bw1,bw2,...
DESCRIPTION
The Extended Transmission Selection (ETS) feature has a recommendation TLV and a configuration TLV configured with ETS-REC and ETS-CFG
respectively.
ARGUMENTS
enableTx
Enables the ETS TLV to be transmitted
willing
Sets the ETS-CFG willing bit
tsa Transmission selection algorithm, sets a comma separated list of traffic classes to the corresponding selection algorithm. Valid
algorithms include "ets", "strict" and "vendor".
up2tc Comma separated list mapping user priorities to traffic classes.
tcbw Comma separated list of bandwiths for each traffic class the first value being assigned to traffic class 0 and the second to traffic
class 1 and so on. Undefined bandwidths are presumed to be 0.
numtcs Sets/Displays the number of ETS supported traffic classes.
Theory of Operations
IEEE 802.1Qaz is enabled by default on hardware that supports this mode indicated by support for the DCBNL interface. Kernel config option
CONFIG_DCB. The ETS-CFG TLV is advertised by default with the attributes indicated by querying the hardware for its current configuration.
A valid configuration is to map all priorities to a single traffic class and use the link strict selection algorithm. This is equivalent to
being in a non-DCB enabled mode.
To support legacy CEE DCBX the ETS-CFG and ETS-REC TLVs are disabled if a CEE TLV is received and there are no valid IEEE 802.1Qaz TLVs
present. At this time the hardware DCBX mode will be set to CEE and IEEE mode is disabled. This allows switches to be configured and end
nodes will then be configured accordingly without any configuration required on the end node.
Mapping applications and protocols to traffic classes is required for ETS to be useful. User space programs can encode the priority of an
application with the SO_PRIORITY option. Low level drivers that support priority to traffic class mappings may enable this mode by default.
For drivers that do not support this mode manual configuration can support this mode of operation see tc-mqprio(8) and tc-multiq. Addi-
tionally, tc qdiscs and filters can be used to map protocols to queues see tc(8) for more details along these lines. Finally, many drivers
have support for specific protocols ie Fiber Channel over Ethernet (FCoE).
EXAMPLE & USAGE
Configure willing bit for interface eth2
lldptool -T -i eth2 -V ETS-CFG willing=yes
Configure traffic classes for ETS and strict priority on eth2
lldptool -T -i eth2 -V ETS-CFG tsa=0:ets,1:ets,2:ets,3:ets,4:strict,5:strict
Configure 1:1 mapping from priority to traffic classes on eth2
lldptool -T -i eth2 -V ETS-CFG up2tc=0:0,1:1,2:2,3:3,4:4,5:5,6:6,7:7
Display local configured ETS-CFG parameters for tcbw
lldptool -t -i eth2 -V ETS-CFG -c tcbw
Display last transmitted ETS-CFG TLV
lldptool -t -i eth2 -V ETS-CFG
Configure ETS-CFG and ETS-REC for default DCB on eth2
lldptool -T -i eth2 -V ETS-CFG tsa=0:ets,1:ets,2:ets,3:ets,4:ets,5:ets,6:ets,7:ets up2tc=0:0,1:1,2:2,3:3,4:4,5:5,6:6,7:7
tcbw=12,12,12,12,13,13,13,13
lldptool -T -i eth2 -V ETS-REC tsa=0:ets,1:ets,2:ets,3:ets,4:ets,5:ets,6:ets,7:ets up2tc=0:0,1:1,2:2,3:3,4:4,5:5,6:6,7:7
tcbw=12,12,12,12,13,13,13,13
SOURCE
o IEEE 802.1Qaz (http://www.ieee802.org/1/pages/dcbridges.html)
NOTES
Support for tc-mqprio was added in 2.6.38 on older kernels other mechanisms may need to be used to map applications to traffic classes.
SEE ALSO
lldptool(8), lldptool-app(8), lldpad(8), tc-mqprio(8),
AUTHOR
John Fastabend
open-lldp February 2010 lldptool(8)