Brocade AG Mode
Brocade AG Mode
Brocade AG Mode
30 March 2010
Access Gateway
Administrators Guide
Supporting Fabric OS v6.4.0
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Document History
The following table lists all versions of the Access Gateway Administrators Guide.
Document Title
Publication Number
Summary of Changes
Publication Date
53-1000430-01
First version
January 2007
53-1000633-01
June 2007
53-1000605-01
October 2007
53-1000605-02
March 2008
Added support for new
platforms:
300 and the 4424.
Added support for new features:
- Masterless Trunking
- Direct Target Connectivity
- Advance Device Security policy
- 16- bit routing
53-1000605-03
July 2008
53-1000605-04
July 2008
53-1001189-01
November 2008
53-1001345-01
July 2009
53-1001760-01
March 2010
iii
iv
Contents
xv
xv
xv
xv
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
N_Port configurations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Displaying N_Port configurations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Unlocking N_Ports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Chapter 3
vi
Chapter 4
vii
Appendix A
Troubleshooting
Index
viii
Figures
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
Figure 5
Figure 6
Figure 7
Figure 8
Figure 9
Figure 10
Figure 11
Failback behavior. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Figure 12
Figure 13
ix
Tables
Table 1
Table 2
Port configurations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Table 3
Table 4
Table 5
Table 6
Table 7
Address identifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Table 8
Table 9
Table 10
Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
xi
xii
Chapter 1, Access Gateway Basic Concepts describes the Brocade Access Gateway and
provides an overview of its key features.
Chapter 2, Configuring Ports in Access Gateway mode describes how to configure ports in
Access Gateway mode.
Chapter 3, Managing Policies and Features in Access Gateway Mode describes how to
enable policies on a switch in Access Gateway mode. It also provides information on how to set
up Failover and Failback, and discusses how Trunking and Adaptive Networking works in AG.
Chapter 4, SAN Configuration with Access Gateway describes how to connect multiple
devices using Access Gateway.
xiii
All Fabric OS switches must be running v6.1.0 or later; all M-EOS switches must be running M-EOSc
9.1 or later, M-EOSn must be running 9.6.2 or later, and Cisco switches with SAN OS must be
running 3.0 (1) and 3.1 (1) or later.
Fabric OS v6.4.0 supports the following Brocade hardware platforms for Access Gateway:
Brocade 300
Brocade 5100
Brocade M5424
Brocade 5450
Brocade 5460
Brocade 5470
Brocade 5480
Brocade VA40-FC
Brocade 8000
Device mapping
Mapping priority support.
Support for the device login balancing policy.
AG support for the Brocade 8000.
Setting per port NPIV login limits
Recommendations for connecting host and target ports to N_Ports.
xiv
Document conventions
This section describes text formatting conventions and important notices formats.
Text formatting
The narrative-text formatting conventions that are used in this document are as follows:
bold text
italic text
Provides emphasis
Identifies variables
Identifies paths and Internet addresses
Identifies document titles
code text
For readability, command names in the narrative portions of this guide are presented in mixed
lettercase: for example, switchShow. In actual examples, command lettercase is often all
lowercase.
--option, option
-argument, arg
Arguments.
[]
Optional element.
variable
Variables are printed in italics. In the help pages, values are underlined or
enclosed in angled brackets < >.
...
value
Fixed values following arguments are printed in plain font. For example,
--show WWN
NOTE
xv
ATTENTION
An Attention statement indicates potential damage to hardware or data.
CAUTION
A Caution statement alerts you to situations that can be potentially hazardous to you or cause
damage to hardware, firmware, software, or data.
DANGER
A Danger statement indicates conditions or situations that can be potentially lethal or extremely
hazardous to you. Safety labels are also attached directly to products to warn of these conditions
or situations.
Cisco
Oracle Corporation.
Sun, Solaris
Netscape
Emulex Corporation
Emulex
QLogic Corporation
QLogic
Key terms
For definitions of SAN-specific terms, visit the Storage Networking Industry Association online
dictionary at: http://www.snia.org/education/dictionary.
For definitions specific to Brocade and Fibre Channel, see the Brocade Glossary.
The following terms are used in this manual to describe Access Gateway mode and its components.
Access Gateway (AG)
Fabric OS mode for switches that reduces SAN (storage area network)
deployment complexity by leveraging NPIV (N_Port ID Virtualization).
Device
Any host or target device with a distinct WWN. Devices may be physical or virtual.
xvi
E_Port
An ISL (Interswitch link) port. A switch port that connects switches together to
form a fabric.
Edge switch
A fabric switch that connects host, storage, or other devices, such as Brocade
Access Gateway, to the fabric.
F_Port
A fabric port. A switch port that connects a host, HBA (host bus adaptor), or
storage device to the SAN. On Brocade Access Gateway, the F_Port connects
to a host or a target.
Mapping
N_Port
NPIV
Additional information
This section lists additional Brocade and industry-specific documentation that you might find
helpful.
Brocade resources
To get up-to-the-minute information, go to http://my.brocade.com and register at no cost for a user
ID and password.
For additional Brocade documentation, visit the Brocade SAN Info Center and click the Resource
Library location:
http://www.brocade.com
Release notes are available on the My Brocade website (http://my.brocade.com) and are also
bundled with the Fabric OS firmware.
Best practice guides, white papers, data sheets, and other documentation is available through
the Brocade Partner website.
For additional resource information, visit the Technical Committee T11 website. This website
provides interface standards for high-performance and mass storage applications for Fibre
Channel, storage management, and other applications:
http://www.t11.org
xvii
For information about the Fibre Channel industry, visit the Fibre Channel Industry Association
website:
http://www.fibrechannel.org
*FT00X0054E9*
FT00X0054E9
The serial number label is located as follows:
Brocade 300, 4100, 4900, 5100, 5300, 7500, 7500E, 7800, 8000, VA-40FC, and Brocade
Encryption SwitchOn the switch ID pull-out tab located inside the chassis on the port side on
the left
Brocade 5000On the switch ID pull-out tab located on the bottom of the port side of the
switch
xviii
Document feedback
Quality is our first concern at Brocade and we have made every effort to ensure the accuracy and
completeness of this document. However, if you find an error or an omission, or you think that a
topic needs further development, we want to hear from you. Forward your feedback to:
documentation@brocade.com
Provide the title and version number of the document and as much detail as possible about your
comment, including the topic heading and page number and your suggestions for improvement.
xix
xx
Chapter
In this chapter
Brocade Access Gateway overview. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fabric OS features in Access Gateway mode. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Access Gateway port types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Access Gateway hardware considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1
3
4
5
The Fabric OS switch in Native mode is a part of the fabric; it requires two to four times as
many physical ports, consumes fabric resources, and can connect to a Fabric OS fabric only.
A switch in AG mode is outside of the fabric; it reduces the number of switches in the fabric
and the number of required physical ports. You can connect an AG switch to either a Fabric OS,
M-EOS, or Cisco-based fabric.
For comparison, Figure 1 illustrates switch function in Native mode and Figure 2 illustrates switch
function in AG mode.
FIGURE 1
FIGURE 2
TABLE 1
Feature
Support
Access Control
Adaptive Networking
Yes
Admin Domains
No
Audit
Yes
Beaconing
Yes
Config Download/Upload
Yes
DHCP
Yes
Environmental Monitor
Yes
Yes
Extended Fabrics
No
Yes**
Fabric Watch
Yes (limited)
No
High Availability
NA
License
Yes**
Log Tracking
Yes
Management Server
NA
Manufacturing Diagnostics
Yes
N_Port ID Virtualization
Yes
Name Server
NA
Open E_Port
NA
Performance Monitor
Persistent ALPA
Yes
Port Mirroring
No
No
Security
SNMP
Yes
TABLE 1
Feature
Support
Speed Negotiation
Yes
Syslog Daemon
Yes
Trunking
Yes**
Yes
Web Tools
Yes
Zoning
NA
1. When a switch is behaving as an AG, RBAC features in Fabric OS are available, but there
are some limitations. For more information on the limitations, refer to Access Gateway hardware
considerations on page 5.
2.
F_Port - fabric port that connects a host, HBA, or storage device to a switch in AG mode.
N_Port - node port that connects a switch in AG mode to the F_Port of the fabric switch.
Fabric
Hosts
N_Port
Edge Switch
F_Port
N_Port
N_Port
F_Port
NPIV
enabled
F_Port
FIGURE 3
Hosts
Switch in Native
Fabric mode
N_Port
F_Port
E_Port
E_Port
N_Port
F_Port
E_Port
E_Port
Fabric Switch
TABLE 2
Port configurations
Port Type
Access Gateway
Fabric switch
F_Port
Yes
Yes
N_Port
Yes
NA
E_Port
NA
Yes
1.
The switch is logically transparent to the fabric, therefore it does not participate in the SAN as a fabric switch.
Access Gateway is supported on the switch platforms and embedded switch platforms listed in
Supported hardware and software on page xiii.
Chapter
In this chapter
Enabling and disabling Access Gateway mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Access Gateway mapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
N_Port configurations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
b.
If the switch mode is anything other than 0, issue the interopmode 0 command to set the
switch to Native mode.
For more information on setting switches to Native mode, refer to the Fabric OS Administrators
Guide.
4. Enter the switchdisable command.
switch:admin> switchdisable
This command to disables all user ports on a switch. All Fibre Channel ports are taken offline.
If the switch was part of a fabric, the remaining switches reconfigure. You must disable the
switch before making configuration changes.
5. Enter the ag --modeenable command.
switch:admin> ag --modeenable
The switch automatically reboots and comes back online in AG mode using a factory default
port mapping. For more information on AG default port mapping, see Table 5 on page 12.
6. Enter the ag --modeshow command to verify that AG mode is enabled.
switch:admin> ag --modeshow
Access Gateway mode is enabled.
You can display the port mappings and status of the host connections to the fabric on Access
Gateway.
7.
8. Enter the switchShow command to display the status of all ports. Note that the following output
is an example only and may not exactly reflect output from the current Fabric OS.
switch:admin> switchshow
switchName:
switch
switchType:
43.2
switchState:
Online
switchMode:
Access Gateway Mode
switchWwn:
10:00:00:05:1e:03:4b:e7
switchBeacon:
OFF
F-Port 50:06:0b:00:00:3c:b7:32
F-Port 10:00:00:00:c9:35:43:f5
F-Port 50:06:0b:00:00:3c:b6:1e
F-Port 10:00:00:00:c9:35:43:9b
F-Port 50:06:0b:00:00:3c:b4:3e
F-Port 10:00:00:00:c9:35:43:f3
Disabled (Persistent)
F-Port 10:00:00:00:c9:35:43:a1
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
Disabled (Persistent)
N-Port
N-Port
N-Port
0x5a0101
0x5a0003
0x5a0102
0x5a0002
0x5a0201
0x5a0202
0x5a0001
10:00:00:05:1e:35:10:1e 0x5a0200
10:00:00:05:1e:35:10:1e 0x5a0100
10:00:00:05:1e:35:10:1e 0x5a0000
When you disable AG mode, The switch automatically reboots and comes back online using the
fabric switch configuration; the AG parameters, such as port mapping, and Failover and
Failback are automatically removed. When the switch reboots, it starts in Fabric OS Native
mode. To re-join the switch to the core fabric, refer to Rejoining Fabric OS switches to a fabric
on page 67.
9. Enter the switchDisable command to disable the switch.
switch:admin> switchdisable
10. Enter the ag command with the --modedisable operand to disable AG mode.
switch:admin> ag --modedisable
TABLE 3
State
Description
No _Card
No _Module
Mod_Val
Mod_Inv
Invalid module
No_Light
No_Sync
In_Sync
Laser_Flt
Port_Flt
Diag_Flt
Lock_Ref
Testing
Running diagnostics
Offline
Online
Port mapping
A specific F_Port is mapped to a specific N_Port. This ensures that all traffic from a specific
F_Port always goes through the same N_Port. To map an F_Port to an N_Port group, simply
map the port to an N_Port that belongs to that port group. All F_Ports mapped to that N_Port
will be part of that port group.
Port-based mapping
An F_Port needs to be mapped to an N_Port before the F_Port can come online. When you first
enable a switch to AG mode, by default, the F_Ports are mapped to a set of predefined N_Ports. For
default port mapping on supported hardware platforms, refer to Table 5. Refer to Adding F_Ports to
an N_Port if you want to change the default mapping.
Figure 4 shows a mapping with eight F_Ports evenly mapped to four N_Ports on a switch in AG
mode. The N_Ports connect to the same fabric through different Edge switches.
10
Hosts
Host_1
Fabric
Access Gateway
Edge Switch
(Switch_A)
F_1
F_A1
N_1
Host_2
NPIV
enabled
F_2
F_A2
Host_3
Host_4
N_2
NPIV
enabled
F_3
Edge Switch
(Switch_B)
F_4
F_B1
N_3
Host_5
NPIV
enabled
F_5
F_B2
N_4
FIGURE 4
Host_6
F_6
Host_7
F_7
Host_8
F_8
NPIV
enabled
TABLE 4
Access Gateway
Fabric
F_Port
N_Port
Edge switch
F_Port
F_1, F_2
N_1
Switch_A
F_A1
F_3, F_4
N_2
Switch_A
F_A2
F_5, F_6
N_3
Switch_B
F_B1
F_7, F_8
N_4
Switch_B
F_B2
If connecting a host and target port to the same AG, you should map them to separate N_Ports
and connect those N_Ports to the same fabric.
11
When configuring secondary port mapping for failover and failback situations, make sure that
initiator and target F_Ports will not fail over or fail back to the same N_Port.
All four FCoE ports in the group are mapped to the same N_Port.
You cannot map individual FCoE ports within the same port group to different N_Ports.
Any Access Gateway operation that involves moving F_Ports will move all FCoE ports in the
group.
All four FCoE ports in a group will failover or failback to one N_Port.
NOTE
All POD licenses must be present to use Access Gateway on the Brocade 5100 and 300.
TABLE 5
.
12
Brocade
Model
Total Ports
F_Ports
N_Ports
VA40-FC
40
0-31
32-39
0-3 mapped to 32
4-7 mapped to 33
8-11 mapped to 34
12-15 mapped to 35
16-19 mapped to 36
20-23 mapped to 37
24-27 mapped to 38
28-31 mapped to 39
300
24
0-15
16 -23
0, 1 mapped to 16
2, 3 mapped to 17
4, 5 mapped to 18
6, 7 mapped to 19
8, 9 mapped to 20
10, 11 mapped to 21
12, 13 mapped to 22
14, 15mapped to 23
TABLE 5
Brocade
Model
Total Ports
F_Ports
N_Ports
5100
40
0-31
32-39
0, 1, 2, 3 mapped to 32
4, 5, 6, 7 mapped to 33
8, 9, 10, 11 mapped to 34
12, 13, 14, 15 mapped to 35
16, 17, 18, 19 mapped to 36
20, 21, 22, 23 mapped to 37
24, 25, 26, 27 mapped to 28
28, 29, 30, 31 mapped to 39
5424
24
1-16
0, 17-23
0, 17-23
1, 2 mapped to 17
3, 4 mapped to 18
5, 6 mapped to 19
7, 8 mapped to 20
9, 10 mapped to 21
11, 12 mapped to 22
13, 14 mapped to 23
15, 16 mapped to 0
5450
26
6-25
Not all ports
may be present.
0, 19-25
1, 2, 17 mapped to 19
3, 4, 18 mapped to 20
5, 6 mapped to 21
7, 8 mapped to 22
9, 10 mapped to 23
11, 12 mapped to 24
13, 14 mapped to 25
15, 16 mapped to 0
5460
26
6-25
0-5
6 and 16 mapped to 0
7 and 17 mapped to 1
8, 12, 18, and 22 mapped to 2
9, 13, 19, and 23 mapped to 3
10, 14, 20, and 24 mapped to 4
11, 15, 21, and 25 mapped to 5
5470
20
1-14
0, 15-19
1, 2 mapped to 0
3, 4 mapped to 15
5, 6, 7 mapped to 16
8, 9 mapped to 17
10, 11 mapped to 18
12, 13, 14 mapped to 19
13
TABLE 5
Brocade
Model
Total Ports
F_Ports
N_Ports
5480
24
1-16
0, 17-23
1, 2 mapped to 17
9, 10 mapped to 18
3, 4 mapped to 19
11, 12 mapped to 20
15, 16 mapped to 0
5, 6 mapped to 21
13, 14 mapped to 22
7, 8 mapped to 23
8000
32
8-31
FCoE ports
mapped as
F_Ports.
0-7
8-11 mapped to 0
12-15 mapped to 1
16-19 mapped to 2
20-23 mapped to 3
24-27 mapped to 4
28-31 mapped to 5
3. Enter the ag --mapshow command and specify the port number to display the list of mapped
F_Ports. Verify that the added F_Ports appear in the list.
switch:admin> ag --mapshow 13
N_Port
Failover(1=enabled/0=disabled)
Failback(1=enabled/0=disabled)
Current F_Ports
Configured F_Ports
PG_ID
PG_Name
14
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
13
1
1
None
6;7
0
pg0
4. Enter the switchshow command to verify that the F_Port is free (unassigned).
Unassigned F_Port status is Disabled (No mapping for F_Port). See port 6 in the following
example.
switch:admin> switchshow
switchName:
fsw534_4016
switchType:
45.0
switchState:
Online
switchMode:
Access Gateway Mode
switchWwn:
10:00:00:05:1e:02:1d:b0
switchBeacon:
OFF
Area Port Media Speed State
Proto
=====================================
0
0
cu
AN
No_Sync
1
1
cu
AN
No_Sync
2
2
cu
AN
No_Sync
3
3
cu
AN
No_Sync
4
4
cu
AN
No_Sync
5
5
cu
AN
No_Sync
6
6
cu
AN
No_Sync
7
7
cu
AN
No_Sync
8
8
cu
AN
No_Sync
9
9
cu
AN
No_Sync
10 10
-N4
No_Module
11 11
-N4
No_Module
12 12
-N4
No_Module
13 13
id
N4
Online
14 14
id
N4
Online
15 15
id
N4
Online
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
N-Port
N-Port
N-Port
(N-Port Offline
(N-Port Offline
(N-Port Offline
(N-Port Offline
(N-Port Offline
(No mapping for
for F-Port)
for F-Port)
for F-Port)
for F-Port)
for F-Port)
F-Port)
10:00:00:05:1e:35:10:1e 0x5a0a00
10:00:00:05:1e:35:10:1e 0x5a0900
10:00:00:05:1e:35:10:1e 0x5a0800
Device-based mapping
This feature allows you to map individual N_Port ID virtualization (NPIV) devices to N_Ports. By
mapping device WWNs directly to an N_Port group (recommended) or specific N_Ports, traffic from
the device will always go to the same N_Port or N_Port group, regardless of the F_Port where the
device logs in. When Port Grouping Policy and WWN Load Balancing mode is enabled for a port
group, WWNs mapped to that port group are automatically balanced among the online N_Ports in
that group (refer to Port Grouping policy modes on page 36).
15
NOTE
Port Grouping Policy is not supported when both Automatic Login Balancing and Device Load
Balancing are enabled.
Device-based mapping does not affect or replace the traditional port mapping. Device mapping is
an optional mapping that will exist on top of existing port mapping. In general mapping devices to
N_Port groups is recommended over mapping devices to individual N_Ports within a port group.
This ensures maximum device up-time, especially during fail-over conditions and system power
up. This is especially true when a reasonably large number of devices must connect to the same
fabric through a single port group.
These aspects of device mapping are important to note:
Logins from a device mapped to a specific N_Port or N_Port group (device mapping) always
have priority over unmapped devices that log into an F_Port that has been mapped to the
same N_Port or N_Port group (port mapping).
Current device routing (dynamic mapping) may turn out different than your intended mapping
(static mapping), depending on which N_Ports are online and which policies are enabled (for
example, automatic port configuration, device load balancing, failover, or failback). Therefore,
it is recommended to map devices to N_Port groups instead of specific N_Ports within a port
group when using device mapping.
NOTE
Automatic port configuration and device load balancing cannot be enabled at the same time.
Figure 5 on page 17 illustrates an example of device mapping to port groups. In the example,
WWNs 1, 2, and 3 can connect to any N_Port in Port Group 1 (PG1), while WWNs 4 and 5 can
connect with any N_Port in Port Group 2 (PG2).
16
Hosts/Targets
WWN1
Access Gateway
F_1
N_1
F_2
N_2
WWN2
PG1
F_3
N_3
WWN3
F_4
N_4
WWN4
F_5
N_5
WWN5
PG2
F_6
N_6
FIGURE 5
Figure 6 shows an example of device mapping to specific N_Ports. Note that you can map one or
multiple WWNs to one N_Port to allow multiple devices to log in through one N_Port.
17
Hosts/Targets
Access Gateway
WWN1
F_1
WWN2
F_2
N_1
N_2
WWN3
WWN4
F_3
WWN5
F_4
N_3
N_4
WWN6
FIGURE 6
WWN7
F_5
WWN8
F_6
N_5
Device mapping to an N_Port and to an N_Port Group are considered static. Static mappings
persist across reboots and can be saved and restored with Fabric OS configUpload and
configDownload commands.
Automatic WWN load balancing, if enabled, is considered dynamic. These mappings exist only
while a device is logged in. Dynamic mappings cannot be saved or edited by the administrator
and do not persist across reboots. Dynamic mapping shows the current mapping for devices as
opposed to original static mapping, if one had been specified. If a device is mapped to N_port
group, then all mapping is dynamic.
NOTE
These mappings only apply to NPIV devices and cannot redirect devices that are directly attached to
Access Gateway, since physically-attached devices use the port maps to connect to the fabric.
18
Use the following steps to map one or more devices to an N_Port group or remove device mapping
from an N_Port group.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. To add one or multiple device WWNs to an N_Port group, enter the ag --addwwnpgmapping
Port_Group command with the [WWN];[WWN] option.
All the listed device WWNs will use the least loaded N_Port in the port group when they log in,
unless a specific device mapping can be used instead. This command can only map devices
currently connecting through NPIV.
The following example adds two devices to port group 3.
ag --addwwnpgmapping 3 10:00:00:06:2b:0f:71:0c;10:00:00:05:1e:5e:2c:11
To change all currently existing device mappings to a different port group use the --all option
instead of listing all the WWNs.
The following example changes all the currently mapped devices to use port group 3 instead of
the current port group mappings.
ag --addwwnpgmapping 3 --all
To remove all devices mapped to an N_Port group, enter the command with the --all option
instead of listing all WWNs. All of the devices will cease automatic use of the least loaded port
in the port group when they log in. The -all option is a shortcut for specifying all of the devices
that are already mapped with the addwwnpgmapping command.
The following example removes all devices mapped to port group 3.
ag --delwwnpgmapping 3 --all
4. Enter the ag --wwnmapshow command to display the list of WWNs mapped to port groups
and verify that the correct devices have been mapped to the desired port group.
19
The --all options edit all the currently existing mappings. none of the --all options have any way
to detect what devices are using the switch. This option just edits the mappings that are in the
list.
To change all current device mappings to a different N_Port, enter the ag --addwwnmapping
N_Port command with the --all option.
The following command changes all the existing device mappings to use port 17.
ag --addwwnmapping 17 --all
3. To remove mapping for one or multiple devices to an N_Port, enter the ag --delwwnmapping
N_Port command with the [WWN];[WWN] option. All the listed device WWNs will no longer try
to use the N_Port unless a device logs in through an F_Port that is mapped to the N_Port.
The following example removes two devices from N_Port 17.
ag --delwwnmapping 17 10:00:00:06:2b:0f:71:0c;10:00:00:05:1e:5e:2c:11
To remove all devices currently mapped to an N_Port, enter the ag --delwwnmapping N_Port
command with the --all option. All the listed devices will no longer try to use the N_Port unless
a device logs in through an F_Port that is mapped to the N_Port. The -all option is a shortcut for
specifying all of the devices that are already mapped with the addwwnpgmapping command.
The following command removes all devices currently mapped to port 17.
ag --delwwnmapping 17 --all
4. Enter the ag --wwnmapshow command to display the list of N_Ports mapped to WWNs and
verify that the correct WWNs have been mapped or removed from the desired N_Port(s).
20
Enter the ag command with the ag--wwnmappingdisable with the --all option to disable
mapping for all available WWNs. The -all option will not affect mappings made in the future,
Disabled mappings can be modified without automatically enabling them.
The following example removes device mapping for all available WWNs.
switch:admin> ag --wwnmappingdisable --all
Enter the ag --wwnmappingenable with the --all option to enable mapping for all currently
available WWNs. The -all option will not affect mappings made in the future, any mapping
added for a new device, that is one who's mapping is not disabled, will be enabled by default.
Disabled mappings can be modified with out automatically enabling them.
The following command enables all previously disabled device mappings.
switch:admin> ag --wwnmappingenable --all
Note that new device mappings will only be enabled and display the next time the device logs into
the switch.
21
Pre-provisioning
You can use Fabric OS commands, Web Tools, and Fabric Manager to map devices that do not yet
exist. This allows applicable management programs to push configuration changes with out
worrying about the order in which they are received. For example, if system administrators need to
push a set of port group changes and a set of device mapping changes, they could push them in
either order with out error. This also applies to using Fabric OS commands for device mapping. You
could map several devices to a new port group then create the group without error. Removing a
device twice can also be accomplished without error.
VMware configuration
To use the device mapping feature for connecting VMware systems, refer to the Technical Brief:
How to Configure NPIV on VMware ESX Server 3.5 at following link:
http://www.brocade.com/downloads/documents/brocade_vmware_technical_briefs/Brocade_NP
IV_ESX3.5_WP.pdf
The following is a summary of the steps involved.
1. Make sure that virtual port names (VWWPN) of virtual machines (VM) are mapped to the
correct port group (or N_Port). Map all VWWPNs to N_Ports to avoid confusion.
2. Make sure all VWWPNs are mapped for LUN access for array-based targets.
3. Make sure to include all VWWPNs in the zone configuration.
4. Zone the servers physical port to the storage device.
5. Finally check the traffic that originates from virtual node PID (VN PID). if configuration is
correct, traffic will flow from VN PID.
Failover and Failback considerations
When using device mapping with VMware, the base device initiates PLOGI and PRLI to the target,
and then discovers the LUN. The virtual device also initiates a PLOGI and PRLI to the target, but
LUN discovery does not occur. Therefore, when the device-mapped port is toggled and failover or
failback takes place, traffic will resume from the base device. We recommend one of the following
when using device mapping with VMware:
Targets should also be reachable by the base device so that I/Os can resume if the mapped
device fails over and I/Os will move over to the base PID.
Mapping priority
To avoid potential problems when both port-based and device-based mapping are implemented, AG
uses the following priority system when verifying policies to select the N_Port where a FLOGI is
routed. Access Gateway considers all available mappings in the following order until one can be
used.
22
NOTE
Only NPIV devices can use device mapping and the automatic WWN Load Balancing policy.
NOTE
In Fabric OS v6.4.0, the device load balancing policy is enabled per module rather than per
port group.
4. Port mapping to an N_Port
5. Port mapping to an N_Port in a port group (if defined)
For more information, refer to Port Grouping policy on page 33.
If the N_Port is disabled, all devices that are mapped to it will be disabled. Depending on the
effective failover policy, the devices will be enabled on other N_Ports.
Once devices are mapped to an N_Port rather than an N_Port group, they cannot be
automatically rebalanced to another N_Port if an additional N_Port comes online.
There can be cases where two NPIV devices logging through the same F_Port are mapped to
two different N_Ports that are connected to two different fabrics. In this case, both NPIV
devices may be allocated the same PID by their respective fabric. Once Access Gateway
detects this condition, it will disable that F_Port, and the event will be logged.
NOTE
Access Gateway algorithms reduce the chances of PID collisions, but they cannot be totally
eliminated. In some cases, you may be able to configure your virtual or physical fabrics to
further reduce this condition.
Device mapping is not supported when firmware is downgraded to Fabric OS 6.3.x or lower. You
must delete device mappings before downgrading or disable Device Load Balancing.
Static and dynamic device mapping are only supported on the edge module in a cascaded
Access Gateway configuration.
When mapping devices to a port group, make sure that all ports in the group have the same
NPIV login limit. If some ports have a lower login limit than the other ports, and there are many
logins to the group, some devices will repeatedly attempt to connect to the device with the
lower limit (because it has the fewest logins) and fail to connect.
23
N_Port configurations
N_Port configurations
By default, on embedded switches, only the internal ports of Access Gateway are configured as
F_Ports. All external ports are configured (locked) as N_Ports. On standalone switches with AG
support, a preset number of ports are locked as N_Ports and the rest of the ports operate as
standard F_Ports. Although some ports are locked as N_Ports, these ports can be converted to
F_Ports. For example, Figure 7 shows a host connected to external ports of an Embedded Switch
with the switch in AG mode. To convert a N_Port to an F_Port first remove all the F_Ports that are
mapped to that N_Port, then unlock the port from N_Port state. Finally, define a map for the port. It
is highly recommended that all F_Ports mapped to the N_Port first be remapped to other N_Ports
before that port is converted into F_Port. Also note that if APC policy is enabled, the port conversion
is done automatically and no user intervention is necessary. For more information on which ports
are locked as N_Ports by default, see Table 5 on page 12.
FIGURE 7
NOTE
A switch in Access Gateway mode must have at least one port configured as an N_Port. Therefore,
the maximum number of F_Ports that can be mapped to an N_Port is the number of ports on the
switch minus one.
24
N_Port configurations
Unlocking N_Ports
By default, on embedded switches all external ports are configured in N_Port lock mode when you
enable Access Gateway. Access Gateway connects only FCP initiators and targets to the fabric. It
does not support other types of ports, such as ISL (inter switch link) ports.
By default, on fabric switches the port types are not locked. Fabric OS Native mode dynamically
assigns the port type based on the connected device: F_Ports and FL_Ports for hosts, HBAs, and
storage devices; and E_Ports, EX_Ports, and VE_Ports for connections to other switches.
Unlocking the N_Port configuration automatically changes the port to an F_Port. When you unlock
an N_Port, the F_Ports are automatically unmapped and disabled.
Following are procedures for unlocking N_Ports that are in locked mode.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Enter the portcfgnport command.
NOTE
The portcfgnport command only works when the Port Grouping policy is enabled.
switch:admin> portcfgnport
Ports
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
--------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-Locked N_Port
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ON ON ON ON ON ON
3. Enter the portcfgnport command and specify the port number and 0 (zero) to unlock N_Port
mode.
switch:admin> portcfgnport 10 0
Alternatively, to lock a port in N_Port mode, enter the portcfgnport and specify the port number
and 1.
switch:admin> portcfgnport 10 1
25
26
N_Port configurations
Chapter
In this chapter
Access Gateway policies overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Advanced Device Security policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Automatic Port Configuration policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Port Grouping policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Device Load Balancing Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Persistent ALPA Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Failover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Failback . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Trunking in Access Gateway mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Adaptive Networking on Access Gateway. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Per Port NPIV login limit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Considerations for the Brocade 8000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
27
28
31
33
40
41
44
48
50
58
60
60
27
TABLE 6
Policies
Port Grouping
N_Port Trunking
ADS Policy
N/A
Cannot co-exist
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
N_Port Grouping
Mutually exclusive
N/A
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
N_Port Trunking
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
N/A
Can co-exist
ADS Policy1
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
N/A
Cannot co-exist
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
Can co-exist
1.
2.
Device Load Balancing and Automatic Login Balancing cannot be enabled for the same port group.
NOTE
The ag --show command only displays the Core AGs, such as the AGs that are directly connected to
fabric. The agshow --name name command displays the F_Ports of both the Core and Edge AGs.
Alternatively, the security policy can be established in the Enterprise fabric using the DCC policy.
For information on configuring the DCC policy, see Enabling the DCC policy on trunk on page 53.
The DCC policy in the Enterprise fabric takes precedence over the ADS policy. It is generally
recommended to implement the security policy in the AG module rather than in the main fabric,
especially if Failover and Failback policies are enabled.
28
NOTE
Use the ag --policyshow command to determine the current status of the ADS policy.
NOTE
Use an asterisk enclosed in quotation marks,*, to set the Allow list to All Access to all F_Ports;
use a pair of double quotation marks () to set the Allow list to No Access.
Note the following characteristics of the Allow List:
The maximum device entries allowed in the Allow List is twice the per port max login count.
Each port can be configured to not allow any device or to allow all the devices to log in.
If the ADS policy is enabled, by default, every port is configured to allow all devices to log
in.
The same Allow List can be specified for more than one F_Port.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Enter the ag --adsset command with the appropriate operands to set the list of devices
allowed to log into specific ports. In the following example, ports 1, 10, and, 13 are set to all
access.
switch:admin> ag --adsset "1;10;13" "*"
WWN list set successfully as the Allow Lists of the F_Port[s]
29
In the following example, two devices are removed from the list of allowed devices (for ports 3
and 9).
switch:admin> ag --adsdel "3;9"
"22:03:08:00:88:35:a0:12;22:00:00:e0:8b:88:01:8b"
WWNs removed successfully from Allow Lists of the F_Port[s]Viewing F_Ports
allowed to login
In the following example, two devices are added to the list of allowed devices (for ports 3 and
9).
switch:admin> ag --adsadd "3;9"
"20:03:08:00:88:35:a0:12;21:00:00:e0:8b:88:01:8b"
WWNs added successfully to Allow Lists of the F_Port[s]
30
In cascading configurations, you should set the ADS policy on the AG module that directly
connects to the servers.
31
The APC and the PG policies cannot be enabled at the same time. You can still benefit from the
automatic port mapping feature of the APC policy when the port grouping policy is enabled by
enabling the auto distribution feature for each port group.
You cannot manually configure port mapping when this policy is enabled.
32
The APC policy applies to all ports on the switch. Enabling the APC policy is disruptive and
erases all existing port-based mappings. Therefore, before enabling the APC policy, you should
disable the AG module. When you disable the APC policy, the N_Port configuration and the
port-based mapping revert back to the default factory configurations for that platform. It is
recommended that before you either disable or enable APC policy to save the current
configuration file using the configupload command in case you might need this configuration
again.
33
F_Port1
N_Port1
F_Port2
F_Port3
Fabric-1
Storage
Array-1
Fabric-2
Storage
Array-2
N_Port2
F_Port4
PG1
AG
F_Port5
N_Port3
F_Port6
F_Port7
N_Port4
F_Port8
PG2
FIGURE 8
When a dual redundant fabric configuration is used, F_Ports connected to a switch in AG mode can
access the same target devices from both of the fabrics. In this case, you must group the N_Ports
connected to the redundant fabric into a single port group. It is recommended to have paths fail
over to the redundant fabric when the primary fabric goes down. Refer to Figure 9.
F_Port1
N_Port1
Fabric-1
Storage
Array
F_Port2
AG
PG1
F_Port3
N_Port2
Fabric-2
F_Port4
FIGURE 9
34
3. Enter the command ag --pgshow to verify the N_Port was deleted from the specified port
group.
switch:admin> ag --pgshow
PG_ID PG_Name
PG_Mode N_Ports
F_Ports
----------------------------------------------0
pg0
lb,mfnm 1;3
10;11
2
SecondFabric
0;2
4;5;6
-----------------------------------------------
35
Automatic Login Balancing is disruptive. However, you can minimize disruption by disabling or
enabling rebalancing of F_Ports on F_Port offline or N_Port online events. Refer to
Rebalancing F_Ports on page 37.
36
3. Enter the ag --pgshow command to verify the port group was created.
switch:admin> ag --pgshow
PG_ID PG_Name
PG_Mode N_Ports
F_Ports
----------------------------------------------0
pg0
lb,mfnm none
none
2
SecondFabric
0;2
4;5;6
3
FirstFabric
lb
1;3
10;11
Rebalancing F_Ports
To minimize disruption that could occur once F_Ports go offline or when additional N_Ports are
brought online you can modify the default behavior of the automatic login balancing feature by
disabling or enabling rebalancing of F_Ports when F_Port offline or N_Port online events occur.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Enter the agautomapbalance --enable command with appropriate operands to enable
automatic login redistribution of F_Ports. In the following example, rebalancing of F_Ports in
port group 1 in Access Gateway is enabled when an F_Port online event occurs.
switch:admin> agautomapbalance --enable -fport -pg 1
3. Enter the agautomapbalance --disable - all command with appropriate operands to disable
automatic login distribution of N_Ports for all PGs in the Access Gateway when an N_Port
online event occurs.
switch:admin> agautomapbalance --disable -nport -all
4. Enter the agautomapbalance --disable - all command with appropriate operands to disable
automatic login distribution of F_Ports for all port groups in the Access Gateway when an
F_Port online event occurs.
switch:admin> agautomapbalance --disable -fport -all
5. Enter the agautomapbalance --show command to display the automatic login redistribution
settings for port groups. In the following example, there are two port groups, 0 and 1.
switch:admin> agautomapbalance --show
AG Policy: pg
-------------------------------------------PG_ID LB mode nport fport
-------------------------------------------0 Enabled
Enabled
Disabled
1 Disabled
---------------------------------------------
This command also displays the automatic login redistribution settings for N_Ports and
F_Ports as shown in the following example.
switch:admin> agautomapbalance --show
------------------------------------------------AG Policy: Auto
37
Be aware that modifying the APC policy default setting using the agautomapbalance command
may yield to uneven distribution of F_Ports to N_Ports. In such cases you may want to consider
a manual login distribution that forces a rebalancing of F_Ports to N_Ports.
To control automatic rebalancing to avoid disruptions when the Port Grouping policy is
enabled, refer to Rebalancing F_Ports on page 37.
38
NOTE
The pgfnmtov command is blocked on a Brocade 8000.
APC policy and PG policy are mutually exclusive. You cannot enable these policies at the same
time.
If an N_Port is added to a port group or deleted from a port group and login balancing is
enabled or disabled for the port group, the N_Port maintains its original failover or failback
setting. If an N_Port is deleted from a port group, it automatically gets added to port group 0.
When specifying a preferred secondary N_Port for a port group, the N_Port must be from the
same group. If you specify an N_Port as a preferred secondary N_Port and it already belongs to
another port group, the operation fails. Therefore, it is recommended to form groups before
defining the preferred secondary path.
If the PG policy is disabled while a switch in AG mode is online, all the defined port groups are
deleted, but the port mapping remains unchanged. Before disabling the PG policy, you should
save the configuration using the configupload command in case you might need this
configuration again.
If N_Ports connected to unrelated fabrics are grouped together, N_Port failover within a port
group can cause the F_Ports to connect to a different fabric and the F_Ports may lose
connectivity to the targets they were connected to before the failover, thus causing I/O
disruption as shown in Figure 9 on page 34. Ensure that the port group mode is set to
Managed Fabric Name Monitoring (MFNM) mode. This monitors the port group to detect
connection to multiple fabrics and disables failover of the N-ports in the port group. For more
information on MFNM, refer to Enabling Managed Fabric Name Monitoring mode on
page 38.
39
When upgrading to Fabric OS v6.4.0, the PG policy that was enforced in Fabric OS v6.3.0
continues to be enforced in Fabric OS v6.4.0 and the port groups are retained. You should save
the configuration file using the configupload command in case you might need this
configuration again.
If you upgrade from Fabric OS 5.3.0 to 6.0 or higher, you will not see any change in device
behavior where the Port Grouping policy is enabled by default.
40
2. Enter the ag --policydisable wwnloadbalance command to enable the Device Load Balancing
policy.
switch:admin> ag --policydisable wwnloadbalance
The policy WWN load balancing is disabled
NOTE
Use the ag --policyshow command to determine the current status of the WWN Load Balancing
policy.
This policy is not supported on the Brocade 8000 switch for Fabric OS v6.4.0. This is because
MFNM is enabled on the default port group and any created port groups on the Brocade 8000.
As a result, the pgsetmodes, pgdelmodes, and pgcreate commands are blocked for the -m
option, and Automatic Login Balancing cannot be enabled.
If a device is mapped to a port that is currently part of a trunk, then the device will use that
trunk. When trunking is used with Device Load Balancing Policy, then the load on each trunk
will be proportional to the number of ports in that trunk. Use the ag -show command to
determine the devices using a particular trunk.
When using this policy make sure that all ports in the port group have the same NPIV login
limit. If some ports have a lower login limit than the other ports, and there are many logins to
the group, some devices will repeatedly attempt to connect to the device with the lower limit
(because it has the fewest logins) and fail to connect.
In Flexible mode the AG only log s an event that it did not receive the same ALPA from the
core fabric and continues bringing up the device with the new ALPA.
In the Stringent mode, if the requested ALPA is not available, the server login will be rejected
and the server port will not be able to log in into the fabric.
41
Flexible ALPA assigns an unassigned ALPA value when the ALPA assigned to the device is taken
by another host.
Stringent ALPA causes the host login request to be rejected by AG if assignment of the same
ALPA is not possible.
To enable Persistent ALPA, use the following steps.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Enter the ag --persistentalpaenable command to enable persistent ALPA in flexible or
stringent mode.
switch:admin> ag --persistentalpaenable 1 -s/-f
To ensure consistency among the different devices, after Persistent ALPA is enabled, all the
ALPAs become persistent whether they were logged in before the Persistent ALPA feature was
enabled or not.
42
NOTE
All the data must be persistent in case of a reboot. During a reboot, the tables will be dumped to the
persistent_NPIV_config file.
When AG N_Ports are connected to the shared ports of 48-port Director blades
CISCO fabrics. Enable Persistent FCID mode on the connecting Cisco switch to achieve the
same functionality.
Persistent ALPA configuration will not change to the default when the configdefault command
is used, but will retain the previous configuration.
43
Failover
Failover
Access Gateway Failover ensures maximum uptime for the servers. When a port is configured as an
N_Port, failover is enabled by default and is enforced during power-up. Failover allows hosts and
targets to automatically remap to another online N_Port if the primary N-Port goes offline.
NOTE
For port-based mapping, the Failover policy must be enabled on an N_Port for failover to occur. For
device-based mapping, if a device is mapped to an N_Port in a port group, the device will always
reconnect to the least-loaded online N_Port in the group (or secondary N_Port in the group if
configured) if the primary N_Port goes offline. This occurs regardless of whether the Failover policy
is enabled or disabled for the primary N_Port.
This example shows the failover behavior in a scenario where two fabric ports go offline, one after
the other. Note that this example assumes that no preferred secondary N_Port is set for any of the
F_Ports.
First the Edge switch F_A1 port goes offline, as shown in Figure 10 on page 45 Example 1
(left), causing the corresponding Access Gateway N_1 port to be disabled.
The ports mapped to N_1 fail over; F_1 fails over to N_2 and F_2 fails over to N_3.
Next the F_A2 port goes offline, as shown in Figure 10 on page 45 Example 2 (right), causing
the corresponding Access Gateway N_2 port to be disabled.
The ports mapped to N_2 (F_1, F_3, and F_4) fail over to N_3 and N_4. Note that the F_Ports
are evenly distributed to the remaining online N_Ports and that the F_2 port did not participate
in the failover event.
44
Failover
Example 1
Hosts
Host_1
Example 2
Hosts
Access Gateway
Fabric
F_1
Host_1
Access Gateway
Fabric
F_1
Edge Switch
(Switch_A)
Host_2
F_2
F_A1
Edge Switch
(Switch_A)
Host_2
F_2
N_1
Host_3
Host_3
F_3
F_A2
F_3
F_A2
N_2
Host_4
F_A1
N_1
N_2
Host_4
F_4
F_4
Edge Switch
(Switch_B)
Host_5
F_B1
F_5
Edge Switch
(Switch_B)
Host_5
N_3
Host_6
F_6
F_B1
F_5
N_3
F_B2
Host_6
F_6
N_4
F_B2
N_4
Host_7
F_7
Host_7
F_7
Host_8
F_8
Host_8
F_8
Legend
Physical connection
Mapped online
Failover route online
Original mapped route
(offline)
FIGURE 10
NOTE
Preferred mapping is not allowed when automatic login balancing mode is enabled for a port group.
All N_Ports are the same when automatic login balancing is enabled.
45
Failover
To configure N_Port 32 as a failover port for all WWNs mapped to the N_Port, enter the ag
--delwwnfailovermapping N_Port command with the --all operand.
ag --delwwnfailovermapping 32--all
46
Failover
To remove an N_Port as a failover port for all devices mapped to the N_Port, enter the ag
--delwwnfailovermapping N_Port command with the --all option.
The following command removes N_Port 32 as the secondary N_Port for all available devices.
ag --delwwnfailovermapping 32--all
47
Failback
Failback
Failback policy provides a means for hosts that have failed over to automatically reroute back to
their intended mapped N_Ports when these N_Ports come back online. Failback policy is an
attribute of an N_Port and is enabled by default when a port is locked to the N_Port.
Only the originally mapped F_Ports fail back. In the case of multiple N_Port failures, only F_Ports
that were mapped to a recovered N_Port experience failback. The remaining F_Ports are not
redistributed.
NOTE
For port-based mapping, the Failback policy must be enabled on an N_Port for failback to occur. For
device-based mapping, the Failback policy has no effect. If a device is mapped to a port group, it will
always fail over to an online N_Port in the port group (or secondary N_Port if configured) and will
remain connected to this failover N_Port when the original N_Port comes back online.
When an N_Port comes back online, with Failback enabled, the F_Ports that were originally
mapped to it are temporarily disabled.
The F_Port is rerouted to the primary mapped N_Port, and then re-enabled.
The host establishes a new connection with the fabric.
NOTE
The failback period is quite fast and rarely causes an I/O error at the application level.
Example : Failback
In Example 3, described in Figure 11 on page 49, the Access Gateway N_1 remains disabled
because the corresponding F_A1 port is offline. However, N_2 comes back online. See Figure 10
on page 45 for the original fail over scenario.
The ports F_1 and F_2 are mapped to N_1 and continue routing to N_3. Ports F_3 and F_4, which
were originally mapped to N_2, are disabled and rerouted to N_2, and then enabled.
48
Failback
Example 3
Host_1
Fabric
Access Gateway
Hosts
Edge Switch
(Switch_A)
F_1
F_A1
N_1
Host_2
F_2
F_A2
Host_3
Host_4
F_3
N_2
Edge Switch
(Switch_B)
F_4
F_B1
N_3
Host_5
F_5
F_B2
N_4
Host_6
F_6
Host_7
F_7
Host_8
FIGURE 11
F_8
Legend
Physical connection
Mapped online
Failover route online
Original mapped route
(offline)
Failback behavior
49
50
NOTE
By default, Trunking is enabled on all N_Ports of the AG; ensure that this feature is enabled on
N_Ports that are part of port trunk group.
Setting up trunking
Trunking is enabled between two separate Fabric OS switches that support trunking and where all
the ports on each switch reside in the same quad and are running the same speed. Trunk groups
form when you connect two or more cables on one Fabric OS switch to another Fabric OS switch
with ports in the same port group or quad. A port group or a quad is a set of sequential ports, for
example ports 0-3 in the figure shown below. For example, the Brocade 300 platform supports a
trunk group with up to eight ports. The trunking groups are based on the user port number, with
contiguous eight ports as one group, such as 0-7, 8-15, 16-23 and up to the number of ports on
the switch.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Ensure that both modules (Edge switch and the switch running in AG mode) have the trunking
licenses enabled.
3. Ensure that the ports have trunking enabled by issuing the portcfgshow command. If Trunking
is not enabled, issue the portcfgttrunkport port 1 command.
4. Ensure that ports within a trunk have the same speed.
5. Ensure that ports within an ASIC trunk group are used to group the ports as part of a trunk on
the Edge switch or on an AG.
6. Ensure that both modules are running the same Fabric OS versions.
51
If you have AD1: 3,7; 3,8; 4,13; 4,14 and AD2: 3,9; 3,10, and then create a TA with Index 8 with
ports that have index 7, 8, 9, and 10. Then index 7, 9, and 10 are no longer with domain 3. This
means that AD2 does not have access to any ports because index 9 and 10 no longer exist on
domain 3. This also means that AD1 no longer has 3,7 in effect because Index 7 no longer exists
for domain 3. AD1's 3,8, which is the TA group, can still be seen by AD1 along with 4,13 and 4,14.
A port within a TA can be removed, but this adds the Index back to the switch. For example, the
same AD1 and AD2 with TA 8 holds true. If you remove port 7 from the TA, it adds Index 7 back to
the switch. That means AD1's 3,7 can be seen by AD1 along with 3,8; 4,13 and 4,14.
TABLE 7
23
22
Address identifier
21
20 19 18
17
16 15 14
13
Domain ID
12
11
Area_ID
10
7 6
1 0
Port ID
Address Identifier
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Disable the ports to be included in the TA.
3. Enable TA for the appropriate ports. In the following example, TA is enabled for ports 13 and 14
on slot 10 with port index of 125.
switch:admin> porttrunkarea --enable 10/13-14 -index 125
Trunk index 125 enabled for ports 10/13 and 10/14
52
5. Enable ports specified in step 3. Continuing with the example shown in step 3, this would
mean enabling ports 13 and 14.
switch:admin> portenable 10/13
switch:admin> portenable 10/14
Enabling trunking
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Disable the desired ports by entering the portdisable port command for each port to be
included in the TA.
3. Enter the porttrunkarea--enable 3 command with appropriate operands to form a trunk group
for the desired ports. For example, if ports 36-39 were disabled in step 2, then the example
command shown below forms a trunk group for ports 36-39 with index 37. These will be
connected to N_Ports on an AG module.
switch:admin> porttrunkarea --enable 36-39 -index 37
Trunk area 37 enabled for ports 36, 37, 38 and 39.
4. Enter the portenable port command for each port in the TA to re-enable the desired ports, such
as ports 36-39.
5. Enter the switchshow command to display the switch or port information, including created
trunks.
53
Disable each port prior to removing ports from the TA. Then reissue the command:
switch:admin> porttrunkarea --disable 36-39
Trunk area 37 disabled for ports 36, 37, 38 and 39.
Trunking monitoring
For F_Port masterless trunking, you must install Filter, EE or TT monitors on the F_Port trunk port.
Whenever the master port changes, it is required to move the monitor to the new master port. For
example, if a master port goes down, a new master is selected from the remaining slave ports. APM
must delete the monitor from the old master and install the monitor on new master port. If you
attempt to add a monitor to a slave port, it is automatically added to the master port.
TABLE 8
Category
Description
Area assignment
You statically assign the area within the trunk group on the Edge
switch. That group is the F_Port masterless trunk.
The static trunk area you assign must fall within the F_Port trunk
group starting from port 0 on a Edge switch or blade.
The static trunk area you assign must be one of the ports default
areas of the trunk group.
Authentication
Management Server
54
TABLE 8
Category
Description
Trunk area
PWWN
The entire Trunk Area trunk group share the same Port WWN
within the trunk group. The PWWN is the same across the F_Port
trunk that will have 0x2f or 0x25 as the first byte of the PWWN.
The TA is part of the PWWN in the format listed in Table 9 on
page 57.
Downgrade
You can have trunking on, but you must disable the trunk ports
before performing a firmware downgrade.
Note: Removing a Trunk Area on ports running traffic is disruptive.
Use caution before assigning a Trunk Area if you need to
downgrade to a firmware earlier than Fabric OS v6.1.0.
Upgrade
HA Sync
Port Types
Only F_Port trunk ports are allowed on a Trunk Area port. All other
port types that include F/FL/E/EX are persistently disabled.
Default Area
Port X is a port that has its Default Area the same as its Trunk
Area. The only time you can remove port X from the trunk group is
if the entire trunk group has the Trunk Area disabled.
portCfgTrunkPort port, 0
switchCfgTrunk 0
Port Swap
When you assign a Trunk Area to a trunk group, the Trunk Area
cannot be port swapped; if a port is swapped, then you cannot
assign a Trunk Area to that port.
Trunk Master
Fast Write
When you assign a Trunk Area to a trunk group, the trunk group
cannot have fast write enabled on those ports; if a port is fast
write enabled, the port cannot be assigned a Trunk Area.
FICON
FC8-48 blades
55
TABLE 8
Category
Description
FC4-32 blade
Trunking
You must first enable Trunking on the port before the port can
have a Trunk Area assigned to it.
PID format
Long Distance
Port mirroring
Port speed
Ports within a trunk must have the same port speed for a trunk to
successfully be created.
56
ICL port
AD
DCC Policy
DCC policy enforcement for the F_Port trunk is based on the Trunk
Area; the FDISC requests to a trunk port is accepted only if the
WWN of the attached device is part of the DCC policy against the
TA. The PWWN of the FLOGI sent from the AG will be dynamic for
the F_Port trunk master. Because you do not know ahead of time
what PWWN AG will use, the PWWN of the FLOGI will not go
through DCC policy check on an F_Port trunk master. However, the
PWWN of the FDISC will continue to go through DCC policy check.
TABLE 8
Category
Description
D.I. Zoning
(D,I) AD
(D, I) DCC and (PWWN, I) DCC
Creating a Trunk Area may remove the Index (I) from the switch
to be grouped to the Trunk Area. All ports in a Trunk Area share
the same I. This means that Domain,Index (D,I), which refer to
an I, that might have been removed, will no longer be part of the
switch.
Note: Ensure to include AD, zoning and DCC when creating a
Trunk Area.
You can remove the port from the Trunk Area to have the I back
into effect. D,I will behave as normal, but you may see the effects
of grouping ports into a single I.
Also, D,I continues to work for Trunk Area groups. The I can be
used in D,I if the I was the I for the Trunk Area group.
Note: I refers to Index and D,I refers to Domain,Index.
Two masters
QoS
Supported.
The following table describes the PWWN format for F_Port and N_Port trunk ports.
TABLE 9
NAA = 2
2f:xx:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn
(1)
NAA = 2
25:xx:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn
(1)
The ag -wwnmapshow command will not display trunking for device-mapped ports. If a device
is mapped to a port with device mapping and that port is currently part of a trunk, then the
device will use that trunk. When trunking is used with Device Load Balancing Policy, then the
load on each trunk will be proportional to the number of ports in that trunk. Use the ag -show
command to determine the devices using a particular trunk.
57
The Adaptive Networking (AN) license must be installed on all switches operating in Access
Gateway mode to take advantage of the QoS and Ingress Rate Limiting features.
The Server Application Optimization (SAO) license must be installed to extend QoS features to
supported HBAs.
To determine if these licenses are installed on the connected switch, issue the Fabric OS
licenseshow command. Refer to the Fabric OS Administrator's Guide for detailed information about
QoS.
You can configure the ingress rate limiting and SID/DID traffic prioritization levels of QoS for the
following configurations:
58
FIGURE 12
If any of the AG QoS enabled ports are active and you attempt a firmware downgrade, the
downgrade is prevented. You must disable the QoS-enabled ports before performing a
firmware downgrade.
Upgrades from earlier versions to Fabric OS v6.4.0 are allowed, but AG QoS-enabled ports do
not become effective until the ports are disabled or enabled so that QoS mode can be
negotiated on the ISL links.
Disabling QoS on online N_Ports in the same trunk can cause the slave N_Port ID virtualization
(NPIV) F_Port on the edge switch to become persistently disabled with Area has been
acquired. This is expected behavior because after QOS is disabled, the slave NPIV F_Port on
the edge switch also tries to come up as a master. To avoid this issue, simply persistently
enable the slave F_Port on the switch.
59
Upgrading from Fabric OS v6.3.0 to v6.4.0 will retain the NPIV login limit set in v6.3.0
Downgrading from Fabric OS v6.4.0 to v6.3.0 will reset the NPIV login limit back to 255.
The value that you set is persistent across reboots and firmware upgrades.
This feature supports virtual switches, so each port can have a specific NPIV login limit value in
each logical switch.
The login limit default is 126. This value will be set for a port when the portCfgDefault
command is used to reset port default values.
Before changing the login limits, you must disable the port.
This feature only applies to ports enabled for NPIV operation. To enable NPIV functionality for a
port, you can use the portCfgNPIVPort --enable command when the switch is in Fabric OS
Native mode. For details, refer to the Fabric OS Command Reference Manual.
Port mapping
The Brocade 8000 contains FCoE and Fibre Channel ports. In Access Gateway mode, the FCoE
ports are configured logically as F_Ports, while the Fibre Channel ports are configured as N_Ports.
For details on how this affects port-based mapping, refer to Brocade 8000 mapping differences
on page 12.
60
This is not supported on the Brocade 8000 Core AG (the Brocade 8000 is only supported on an
Edge AG).
Fabric OS commands
This section describes differences in using Fabric OS commands on the Brocade 8000 in AG mode.
The following commands are not supported on the Brocade 8000 in AG mode:
- ag --pgmapadd
- ag --pgmapdel
- ag --pgsetmodes
- ag --pgdelmodes
- ag --pgfnmtov
- ag --persistentalpaenable
- ag --printalpamap
- ag --deletepwwnfromdb
- ag --clearalpamap
- ag --wwnmapshow
- ag --addwwnmapping
- ag --delwwnmapping
- ag --addwwnpgmapping
- ag --delwwnpgmapping
- ag --wwnmappingenable
- ag --wwnmappingdisable
- ag -delwwnfailovermapping
- agautomapbalance
- portcfgnport
61
The following commands have restricted usage, mostly because the Brocade 8000 contains
only eight Fibre Channel ports and does not support the Automatic Port Configuration policy:
ag --pgcreate
ag --policyenable
ag --policydisable
ag --portcfgdefault
To enable or disable FCoE (F) ports, use fcoe --enable and fcoe --disable instead of portdisable
and portenable.
The portcfgdefault command resets the degraded state and NPIV PerPort and clears the
BufferLimitedMode on a port. For other AG platforms, this command restores the port
configuration to factory default values.
Port Trunking and QoS features
Because the Brocade 8000 has limited available buffers and Port trunking and QoS require more
buffers than normal, consider the following points:
Do not enable QoS by itself on more than six Fibre Channel ports at a time. If you attempt to
enable on more than six ports, the Brocade 8000 may enter buffer-limited mode.
To enable both Trunking and QoS on the Brocade 8000, we recommend that you enable QoS
first. If you enable Trunking first, both features will compete for buffers and you will not able to
enable QoS on more than two ports. If you enable QoS first, adequate buffers will be available
for Trunking due to the function of QoS.
Automatic Login Balancing
MFNM is enabled by default on all port groups and cannot be disabled on the Brocade 8000.
Because of this, the pgsetmodes, pgdelmodes, and pgcreate commands are blocked for the -m
option, and Automatic Login Balancing cannot be enabled.
62
Chapter
In this chapter
Connectivity of multiple devices overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct target attachment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Target aggregation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Access Gateway cascading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fabric and Edge switch configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Connectivity to Cisco Fabrics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Rejoining Fabric OS switches to a fabric . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
63
63
64
64
65
67
67
Considerations
Direct Target attachment to AG is only supported if the AG module is also connected to a core
fabric. A switch module running in AG mode does not provide Name Services on its own, and
routing to the target devices will need to be established by the core fabric.
63
Target aggregation
Redundant configurations should be maintained so that when hosts and targets fail over or fail
back, they should not get mapped to a single N_Port.
Target aggregation
Access Gateway mode is normally used as host aggregation. In other words, a switch module in AG
mode aggregates traffic from a number of host systems onto a single uplink N_Port. Similarly,
many targets can be aggregated onto to a single uplink N_port. This feature has many applications.
As one example, you can consolidate targets with various lower Fibre Channel speeds (such as1, 2
or 4 Gbps) onto a single high-speed uplink port to the core fabric. This reduces the number of core
fabric ports used by target devices and allows higher scalability.
F_Port
N_Port
F_Port
N_Port
F_ Port
Edge
AG
Core
AG
Fabric
F_Port
N_Port
F_ Port
F_ Port
FIGURE 13
AG cascading provides higher over-subscription because it allows you to consolidate the number of
ports going to the main fabric. There is no license requirement to use this feature.
Note the following configuration considerations when cascading Access Gateways:
Only one level of cascading is supported. Note that several Edge AGs can connect into a single
Core AG to support even a higher consolidation ratio.
64
AG trunking between the Edge and Core AG switches is not supported. Trunking between the
Core AG switch and the fabric is supported.
It is recommended that you enable Advanced Security Policy (ADS) on all AG F_Ports that are
directly connected to devices.
Due to high subscription ratios that could occur when cascading AGs, ensure there is enough
bandwidth for all servers when creating such configurations. The subscription ratio becomes
more acute in a virtual environment.
Install and configure the switch as described in the switchs Hardware Reference manual
before performing these procedures.
Verify that the interop mode parameter is set to Brocade Native mode.
Configure the F_Ports on the Edge switch to which Access Gateway is connected as follows:
Enable NPIV.
Disable long distance mode.
Allow multiple logins for M-EOS switches. The recommended fabric login setting is the
maximum allowed per port and per switch.
Allow inband queries for forwarded fabric management requests from the hosts. Add the
Access Gateway switch WWN to the access list if inband queries are restricted.
Before connecting Access Gateway to classic Brocade switches, disable the Fabric OS Management
Server Platform Service to get accurate statistical and configuration fabric data,
65
switchType:
76.6
switchState:
Online
switchMode:
Native
switchRole:
Subordinate
switchDomain:
13
switchId:
fffc01
switchWwn:
10:00:00:05:1e:03:4b:e7
zoning:
OFF
switchBeacon:
OFF
----------------------------------------=
where
vfid
state
Can be enable for the enabled state or disable for the disabled state.
where
osmsState
Can be enable or 1 for the enabled state or disable or 0 for the disabled
state.
3. Enable NPIV functionality on the Edge fabric ports so that multiple logins are allowed for each
port. Enter the following command on the M-EOS switch to enable NPIV on the specified ports.
config NPIV
NOTE
You can run the agshow command to display Access Gateway information registered with the fabric.
When an Access Gateway is exclusively connected to Non-Fabric-OS-based switches, it will not show
up in the agshow output on other Brocade Switches in the fabric.
66
Your Cisco switch is now ready to connect to a switch in Access Gateway mode.
If you saved a Fabric OS configuration before enabling AG mode, download the configuration
using the configDownload command.
If you want to re-join the switch to the fabric using the fabric configuration, use the following
procedure.
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Enter the switchDisable command to disable the switch.
3. Enter the defZone --allAccess command to allow the switch to merge with the fabric.
4. Enter the cfgSave command to commit the defzone changes.
5. Enter the switchEnable command to enable the switch and allow it to merge with the fabric.
The switch automatically re-joins the fabric.
67
68
Appendix
Troubleshooting
TABLE 10
Troubleshooting
Problem
Cause
Solution
Need to reconfigure
N_Port and F_Ports
69
A
TABLE 10
Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting (Continued)
Problem
Cause
Solution
Verify that the failover and failback policies are enabled, as follows:
Enter the ag --failoverShow command with the port_number
operand.
Enter the ag --failbackShow command with the port_number
operand.
Command returns Failback (or Failover) on N_Port port_number is
supported.
If it returns, Failback (or Failover) on N_Port port_number is not
supported. See F_Ports automatically fail over to any available
N_Port. Alternatively, you can specify a preferred secondary N_Port in
case the primary N_Port fails. If the primary N_Port goes offline, the
F_Ports fail over to the preferred secondary N_Port (if it is online),
then re-enable. If the secondary N_Port is offline, the F_Ports will
disable. Define the preferred secondary N_Ports per F_Port. For
example, if two F_Ports are mapped to a primary N_Port 1, you can
define a secondary N_Port for one of those F_Ports and not define a
secondary N_Port for the other F_Port. F_Ports must have a primary
N_Port mapped before a secondary N_Port can be configured. on
page 45.
Login Rejected by FC
stack messages on
console may be seen
during F_Port and N_Port
disruptions on Brocade
8000 in AG Mode.
NOTE
If a Fabric OS switch is in AG mode and is also set to McDATA Fabric mode, when that switch is
connected to an M-EOS switch, the Fabric OS switch does not display in the output when you run the
agshow command.
70
Index
A
Access Gateway
cascading, 64
comparison to standard switches, 4
compatible fabrics, 1
connecting devices, 63
connecting two AGs, 64
description, 1
displaying information, 66
features, 3
limitations, 5
mapping description, 11
port types, 4
Access Gateway mode
comparison, 2
disabling, 9
port types, 4
supported firmware versions, 63
terms, xvi
verifying, 7
ACL policies, settings, 65
adding devices to fabric, 30
address Identifier, 52
admin domain, 56
ADS Policy
adding devices, 30
displaying devices, 30, 31
enabling, 29
removing devices, 30
APC Policy
disabling, 33
rebalancing F_Ports, 37
support for port groups, 36
area assignment, 54
authentication, limitations, 54
Brocade 8000
AG considerations, 60
default mapping, 12
mapping differences, 12
C
Cisco fabric
connectivity, 67
enabling NPIV on Cisco switch, 67
code, xv
B
behavior, failover policy, 49
71
commands
ag --addwwnfailovermapping, 46
ag --addwwnpgmapping, 19
ag --delwwnfailovermapping, 47
ag --delwwnpgmapping, 19
ag --failbackEnable, 49, 50
ag --failbackShow, 49, 70
ag --failoverDisable, 47
ag --failoverEnable, 47, 48
ag --failoverShow, 47, 70
ag --mapAdd, 14
ag --mapDel, 15
ag --mapShow, 8, 14
ag --modeDisable, 9, 70
ag --modeEnable, 7, 69
ag --modeShow, 7
ag --policydisable wwnloadbalance, 41
ag --policyenable wwnloadbalance, 40
ag --wwnmapping, 19, 20, 46, 47
ag --wwnmappingdisable, 20
ag --wwnmappingenable, 21
ag --wwnmapshow, 19, 20
cfgSave, 67
configDownload, 67
configUpload, 18
defZone --allAccess, 67
portCfgNpivPort, 69
portCfgNport, 25, 69
portCfgShow, 69
switchDisable, 9, 67, 69, 70
switchEnable, 67
switchMode, 69, 70
switchShow, 8, 15, 65, 69, 70
compatibility, fabric, 65
configurations
enabling switch, 67
limitations with configdownload command, 56
merging switch with fabric, 67
re-joining switch to fabric, 67
saving, 67
using configdownload command, 67
E
Edge switch
FLOGI, 65
long distance mode setting, 65
NPIV, 65
settings, 65
D
daisy chaining, 63
DCC policy
adding WWN, 53
enabling, 53
limitation creating TA, 56
default area, removing ports, 55
72
F_Port
adding external port on embedded switch, 24
description, 4
mapping, example, 11
maximum number mapped to N_Port, 24
settings, Edge switch, 65
shared area ports, 52
trunking setup, 51
fabric
compatibility, 65
inband queries, 65
join, 67
logins, 65
management server platform, 65
zoning scheme, 65
Fabric OS management server platform service settings,
65
failback policy
upgrade and downgrade considerations, 50
failback policy example, 44, 48
failover
device mapping, 46
failover policy
behavior, 45
configurations for port mapping, 44
enabling, 47
example, 45, 49
port mapping, 44
fast write limitation, 55
FICON, F_Port trunk ports, 55
limitations
device load balancing, 41
direct connections to target devices, 5
loop devices not supported, 5
login balancing considerations, 38
long distance mode, Edge switch, 65
H
HA sync, TA present, 55
I
ICL ports, limitations, 56
inband queries, 65
initiator and target port considerations, 11
J
join fabric, 67
M
managed fabric name monitoring
disabling, 38
displaying current timeout value, 38
enabling, 38
setting timeout values, 39
management server, 54
mapping
Brocade 8000 differences, 12
considerations, 22
default mapping for Brocade 8000, 12
device, 10
device to port groups, 18
devices to ports, 20
example, 11
port, 10
ports, 10
mapping priority, 10
masterless trunking, 56
M-EOS switch, enabling NPIV, 66
N
N_Port
configurations, 24
description, 4
displaying configurations, 25
failover in a PG, 39
mapping example, 11
masterless trunking, 51
maximum number supported, 24
multiple trunk groups, 57
trunk groups, 57
unlock, 25
unlocking, 25
N_Port configurations
displaying, 25
73
N_Ports
unlocking, 25
native switchMode, 66
non disruptive, 55
NPIV
Edge switch, 65
enabling on Cisco switch, 67
enabling on M-EOS switch, 66
login limit, 60
support, 63
O
optional features, xviii
P
per port NPIV login limit, 60
Persistent ALPA
support, 41
persistent ALPA
clearing ALPA values, 43
considerations, 43
deleting hash table data, 42
disabling, 42
enabling, 42
flexible ALPA value, 42
reboot, 43
stringent ALPA value, 42
tables, 42
upgrade and downgrade considerations, 43
value types, 42
policies
advance device security, 28
enabling DCC policy, 53
enforcement matrix, 28
port grouping, 33
showing current policies, 27
using policyshow command, 27
port
comparison, 4
mapping, 10
requirements, 63
types, 4
port group
add N_Port, 34, 36
create, 36
delete N_Port, 35
disabling, 35
enabling loging balancing mode, 36
login balancing mode, 36
managed fabric name monitoring mode, 36
remove port group, 35
rename, 35
Port Grouping policy
using portcfgnport command, 25
port grouping policy
considerations, 39
downgrading considerations, 40
port mapping, 10
adding F_Ports to N_Ports, 14
adding ports, 14
adding secondary N_Port, 45
considerations for initiator and target ports, 11
default F_Port-to-N_Port, 12
deleting secondary N_Port, 46
maximum number of F_Ports, 24
removing F_Ports from N_Ports, 15
removing F_Ports fromn N_Ports, 15
Port mirroring, not supported, 56
port state, description, 9
port swap, not swapping TA, 55
port types, limitations, 55
preferred secondary N_Port
login balancing mode, 45
online, 44
PWWN
format, 57
sharing TA trunk group, 55
Q
QoS
firmware downgrade, 59
ingress rate limiting, 58
SID/DID traffic prioritization, 58
R
removing devices from switch, 30
removing trunk ports, 55
requirements, ports, 63
74
settings
ACL policies, 65
FLOGI, 65
inband queries, 65
management server platform, 65
zone, no access, 67
static vs. dynamic mapping, 18
supported hardware and software, xiii
switch mode, verify, 65
zoning
schemes, 65
setting, 67
T
terms, xvi
trunk area
assign, 52
configuration management, 52
disabling, 55
remove ports, 52
standby CP, 55
using the porttrunkarea command, 56
trunk groups, create, 51
trunk master, limitation, 55
trunking, 50
configuring on edge switch, 51
considerations in AG module, 57
considerations on edge switch, 54
disabling, 54
enabling, 53, 56
license, 50
monitoring, 54
U
unlock N_Port, 25
upgrading, 55
V
VMware configuration for device mapping, 22
75
76