HP 2910AL User Manual

Page 316

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Port Traffic Controls
Rate-Limiting

Rate-limiting is visible as an outbound forwarding rate:

Because

inbound rate-limiting is performed on packets during packet-processing,
it is not shown via the inbound drop counters. Instead, this limit is
verifiable as the ratio of outbound traffic from an inbound rate-limited
port versus the inbound rate.

Operation with other features:

Configuring rate-limiting on a port

where other features affect port queue behavior (such as flow control)
can result in the port not achieving its configured rate-limiting maximum.
For example, in a situation where flow control is configured on a rate-
limited port, there can be enough “back pressure” to hold high-priority
inbound traffic from the upstream device or application to a rate that is
lower than the configured rate limit. In this case, the inbound traffic flow
does not reach the configured rate and lower priority traffic is not
forwarded into the switch fabric from the rate-limited port. (This behavior
is termed “head-of-line blocking” and is a well-known problem with flow-
control.) In another type of situation, an outbound port can become
oversubscribed by traffic received from multiple rate-limited ports. In this
case, the actual rate for traffic on the rate-limited ports may be lower than
configured because the total traffic load requested to the outbound port
exceeds the port’s bandwidth, and thus some requested traffic may be held
off on inbound.

Traffic filters on rate-limited ports:

Configuring a traffic filter on a

port does not prevent the switch from including filtered traffic in the
bandwidth-use measurement for rate-limiting when it is configured on the
same port. For example, ACLs, source-port filters, protocol filters, and
multicast filters are all included in bandwidth usage calculations.

Monitoring (Mirroring) rate-limited interfaces:

If monitoring is

configured, packets dropped by rate-limiting on a monitored interface will
still be forwarded to the designated monitor port. (Monitoring shows what
traffic is inbound on an interface, and is not affected by “drop” or
“forward” decisions.)

Optimum rate-limiting operation:

Optimum rate-limiting occurs with

64-byte packet sizes. Traffic with larger packet sizes can result in
performance somewhat below the configured bandwidth. This is to
ensure the strictest possible rate-limiting of all sizes of packets.

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