03-09-2016 10:57 PM
Dear all experts,
should I ask a question about when should I deploy a port vsan on storage network ?
just like :
vsan database
vlan 10 interface fc1/1
the device including N5K,N7K and MDS 9000. the possible scenarios including :
1. FC port to a host;
2 FC port with trunking;
3 FC port with non-trunking;
4 FC NPV port.
5. FCOE port to a host;
6. FCOE port with trunking;
7. FCOE port with non-trunking;
8.FCOE NPV port.
Is there a standard policy for it ?
Thanks a lot,
Br,
David
Solved! Go to Solution.
03-11-2016 04:23 AM
Hi David
For simplicity, I only consider one of the 2 FC fabrics, eg. Fabric A
Lets assume you have 2 VSAN's in Fabric A, 10 for storage, and 20 for backup.
For a access port (N-port in FC terms), you would assign the fc ports to vsan 10, resp 20.
If you have eg. 2 MDS in your fabric A, which are interconnected by a trunking ISL (E-port), then you assign the ISL FC ports to vsan X, and the trunk would allow vsan 10 AND 20 frames.
Q. what is X ? It could be anything (don't use VSAN 1), eg. 10, or 20, or 30
Yes, FCoE is essentially FC; all the FC concepts apply (eg. zoning, multipathing, vsan,....) see eg.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/servers-unified-computing/ucs-manager/116188-configure-fcoe-00.html#anc10
Walter.
03-10-2016 12:23 PM
Hi David
Talking about FC.
Every FC port has to be in a VSAN, by default in VSAN 1, which should never be used in production.
FC N-ports, connecting end devices (frames don't have a VSAN tag, but the port is assigned a VSAN)
FC E-Ports, connecting other FC switches over ISL.
- a ISL can be trunking, meaning transporting multiple VSAN tagged frames (only possible, if peer supports VSAN's, eg. Cisco MDS, N5k,...
- a ISL can be non trunking, in which case only one VSAN is linked to a peer FC switch, which most likely is non Cisco switch (e.g. Brocade), the FC frames don't have a VSAN tag.
- every E-port (trunking or non trunking) is assigned a VSAN.
Walter.
03-10-2016 06:15 PM
Hi Walter,
Thanks for your professional guide on here. and sorry for the unclear description.
what I mean "port vsan" is to assign the service vsan to the port. for example, the storage service is running on vsan 100. when should I also have the additional action to assigned vsan 100 to port ?
is there any different between FC and FCOE for that?
what I understand as below , please correct me if misunderstand.
1. FC port to a host------need to port vsan
2 FC port with trunking ---- trunk allow also need to assign port vsan
3 FC port with non-trunking ---- non trunk need to assign port vsan
4 FC NPV port. ------ NP port and F port, need to port vsan
5. FCOE port to a host ----- need to port vsan
6. FCOE port with trunking; ----- trunk allow also need to assign port vsan
7. FCOE port with non-trunking;------ non trunk need to assign port vsan
8.FCOE NPV port. ------ NP port and F port, need to port vsan
Thanks,
Br,
David
03-11-2016 04:23 AM
Hi David
For simplicity, I only consider one of the 2 FC fabrics, eg. Fabric A
Lets assume you have 2 VSAN's in Fabric A, 10 for storage, and 20 for backup.
For a access port (N-port in FC terms), you would assign the fc ports to vsan 10, resp 20.
If you have eg. 2 MDS in your fabric A, which are interconnected by a trunking ISL (E-port), then you assign the ISL FC ports to vsan X, and the trunk would allow vsan 10 AND 20 frames.
Q. what is X ? It could be anything (don't use VSAN 1), eg. 10, or 20, or 30
Yes, FCoE is essentially FC; all the FC concepts apply (eg. zoning, multipathing, vsan,....) see eg.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/servers-unified-computing/ucs-manager/116188-configure-fcoe-00.html#anc10
Walter.
03-13-2016 11:59 PM
Thanks Walter,
I think I got your point , thanks a lot for your detail instruction.
David
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