CLI Guide

Table Of Contents
Layer 2 Switching Commands 396
Ethernet Configuration Commands
Dell EMC Networking N1100-ON/N1500/N2000/N2100-ON/N2200-
ON/N3000-ON/N3100-ON Series Switches
Dell EMC Networking switches support a variety of configuration options to
optimize network operations. Features such as flow-control and jumbo frames
are supported along with a variety of commands to display traffic statistics as
well as limit the effects of network loops or other network issues.
Jumbo frame technology is employed in certain situations to reduce the task
load on a server CPU and to transmit large amounts of data efficiently. Jumbo
frames technology predominantly appears where certain applications would
benefit from using a larger frame size, e.g. Network File System (NFS). The
larger frame size eliminates some of the need for fragmentation, leading to
greater throughput. The increase in throughput is particularly valuable on
data center servers where the larger frame size increases efficiency of the
system and allows processing of more requests. The Dell EMC Networking
jumbo frames feature extends the standard Ethernet MTU (Max Frame Size)
from 1518 (1522 with VLAN header) bytes to 9216 bytes. However, any device
connecting to the same broadcast domain should support the same or larger
MTU.
Flow control is a mechanism or protocol used to temporarily suspend
transmission of data to a device to avoid overloading the device receive path.
Dell EMC Networking switching implements the flow control mechanism
defined in IEEE 802.3 Annexes 31A and 31B (formerly IEEE 802.3x). Dell
EMC Networking switches implement receive flow control only. They never
issue a flow control PAUSE frame when congested, but do respect flow
control PAUSE frames received from other switches. Disabling flow control
causes the switch to ignore received PAUSE frames. Flow control is enabled
by default for all ports.
Storm control allows for rate limiting of specific types of packets through the
forwarding plane. The administrator can configure the absolute rate in
packets-per-second for the Storm control threshold. Each classified packet
type (broadcast, multicast, or unicast) can be enabled/disabled per port, and
the threshold level at which Storm-Control is active is also configurable per-
port and per-type (as a percentage of interface speed).