sbyrd wrote:Why such a discrepancy between what you say is best in regards to flow control and what Chuck is saying?
I seem to recall in the past you said that flow control should be on every link to a routed interface where then the normal L3 control mechanisms can take over, but Chuck is saying to isolate flow control to just the AF facing port and not take it all the way back to the router when you have multiple devices connected to an L2 switch.
Seth, you are taking select bits and piece of what I said to make your argument which is not correct.
Depending on your setup (topography) Flow Control is GOOD to use, especially when you have a router at every tower and not a large flat network.
Also if you take care as to not have backhaul and uplink ports combined, this is achieved with creating midspan injectors with the switch as seen in my video.
Go back and watch my 1.5 hour video and re-read my posts on flow control. I am not going to type out an hour long post to recap what I have said already, sorry.
What Chuck is saying has merit as far as his suggestions to deal with their Flow Control Pause Frame Storm (WHICH SHOULD NOT HAPPEN) is all I said.
You could do what he suggested and/or try the other option I gave you and see what works best for you.
But personally I would like to see them FIX this issue with their firmware so as not to send millions of unsolicited Pause Frames when their buffer is full because a modulation rate changed drastically reducing its capacity or their link dropped.
Stupid to send pause frames when the link is DOWN, they should DROP the packets. THis is what is causing you the most problems at this point.
This is not Rocket Science and if you sit back and think about or even draw it out on a chalkboard you will understand what is happening.
Picture the switch in your case.
Port 1,2 is the uplink for all ports with an LACP LAG
Port 3,4,5 are PTP links
If port 3 get slammed with Pause Frames and packet are still coming in port 1 or 2 destined to Port 3 they get held in the switch buffers until they fill up and then the switch says I am not allowed to drop them so I need to tell what ever is sending the packets in Port 1 or 2 to Pause so it send Tx Pause Frames out port 1 or 2 but WAIT A MINUTE, when it do this all links including ports 4,5 no longer get data and the switch also no longer is getting data on either port 1 or 2. Port 1 and 2 belong to a LACP lag so the absence of the BPDU packets which are also paused cause the LACP to drop that link from the LACP LAG.
JUST THiNK ABOUT WHAT THE CAUSE AND EFFECTS ARE.
Instead of trying to ask me what is best for your network try to understand what is going on. It may take you awhile but they you will have a better understanding of what is going on and how to build your topography.
We do NOT have a bug in the way we handle Flow Control or LACP.
You know what the AF will do when the link is under needed capacity from modulating down, simply sending ti too much data to pass, or the link drops.
Now draw it out on a board or in your head and wrap your mind around what is happening. It really is not to hard to figure this out and understand it.