Priority-Tagged Frames on the Default VLAN

Priority-tagged frames are 802.1Q tagged frames with VLAN ID 0.
For VLAN classification, these packets are treated as untagged. However, the dot1p value is still honored
when you configure service-class dynamic dot1p or trust dot1p.
When priority-tagged frames ingress an untagged port or hybrid port, the frames are classified to the
default VLAN of the port and to a queue according to their dot1p priority if you configure service-
class dynamic dotp or trust dot1p. When priority-tagged frames ingress a tagged port, the frames
are dropped because, for a tagged port, the default VLAN is 0.
Dell Networking OS Behavior: Hybrid ports can receive untagged, tagged, and priority tagged frames.
The rate metering calculation might be inaccurate for untagged ports because an internal assumption is
made that all frames are treated as tagged. Internally, the ASIC adds a 4-bytes tag to received untagged
frames. Though these 4-bytes are not part of the untagged frame received on the wire, they are included
in the rate metering calculation resulting in metering inaccuracy.
Configuring Port-Based Rate Policing
If the interface is a member of a VLAN, you may specify the VLAN for which ingress packets are policed.
Rate policing ingress traffic on an interface.
INTERFACE mode
rate police
Example of the rate police Command
Dell#config t
Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/0
Dell(conf-if)#rate police 100 40 peak 150 50
Dell(conf-if)#end
Dell#
Configuring Port-Based Rate Shaping
Rate shaping buffers, rather than drops, traffic that exceeds the specified rate until the buffer is exhausted.
If any stream exceeds the configured bandwidth on a continuous basis, it can consume all of the buffer
space that is allocated to the port.
Apply rate shaping to outgoing traffic on a port.
INTERFACE mode
rate shape
Apply rate shaping to a queue.
QoS Policy mode
rate—shape
Quality of Service (QoS) 723