03-19-2010 01:28 AM - edited 03-01-2019 09:37 AM
Hi,
Can anyone please confirm this:
Connecting an FC Storage Array directly to the FC NAtive ports of the UCS or Nexus 5K (and not through an MDS or Brocade switch) is supported and requires FC-SW mode and not NPV mode:
For Nexus 5K: It can run in FC-SW mode or NPV mode (but not at the same time). In FC-SW mode, it’s like a full featured Cisco MDS FC switch, so we can connect the FC storage array directly to it, but with the limitation of having only one VSAN (as Inter VSAN Routing (IVR) is not supported)-
For UCS 6100: Now in case of UCS 6100 Fabric interconnect switch, we cannot directly connect the FC storage array to its native FC ports, it won't work at all, since the UCS 6100 only runs in NPV mode (no FC-SW mode supported, like the Nexus 5K), the FC port on the 6100 Fabric interconnect only supports connections to existing SAN (FC Switch) and not direct connections to a single FC Storage array.
Thank you
Michel
Solved! Go to Solution.
03-19-2010 07:10 AM
I can confirm (from experience) that you cannot connect a storage array directly
to the 6100s - exactly for the reason you state in your question - the 6100 cannot act as an FC switch.
I have heard from our pre-sales engineer that you can use a N5k to do the FC switching, but haven't had a chance to try it yet.
03-19-2010 11:13 AM
UCS is a big host. The fabric interconnects are not switches, though you _could_ run them in Switch Mode, you really shouldn't.
You wouldn't connect an FC array to a fabric interconnect just like you wouldn't connect an FC array to a host. Lots of FC reasons for this regarding fabric logins, zoning etc.
Everyone is connecting the 6100 to MDS or Brocade.
03-21-2010 02:19 AM
In short - yes. The Nexus in FC Switch mode is very similar in features as an MDS. There will be some enhancements added in the next software/hardware releases that will expand on existing features such as F-Port trunking, mutli-hop FCoE etc. You might not go out and replace all your existing brocade/MDS devices in your datacenter, but you certainly can start with the N5K and expand as needed. Makes a great unit for a lab incorporating both FC and 10G switching in one devices.
Robert
03-19-2010 07:10 AM
I can confirm (from experience) that you cannot connect a storage array directly
to the 6100s - exactly for the reason you state in your question - the 6100 cannot act as an FC switch.
I have heard from our pre-sales engineer that you can use a N5k to do the FC switching, but haven't had a chance to try it yet.
03-19-2010 11:13 AM
UCS is a big host. The fabric interconnects are not switches, though you _could_ run them in Switch Mode, you really shouldn't.
You wouldn't connect an FC array to a fabric interconnect just like you wouldn't connect an FC array to a host. Lots of FC reasons for this regarding fabric logins, zoning etc.
Everyone is connecting the 6100 to MDS or Brocade.
03-21-2010 01:33 AM
Thank you,
it's clear now for the UCS.
what about the Nexus 5K? can we connect a Storage Array directly to it?
can the Nexus 5K replace a borcade or MDS switch? specially that we have a 12,000$ storage license for the Nexus 5K!!
N5010-SSK9 | Nexus 5010 Storage Protocols Services License |
03-21-2010 02:19 AM
In short - yes. The Nexus in FC Switch mode is very similar in features as an MDS. There will be some enhancements added in the next software/hardware releases that will expand on existing features such as F-Port trunking, mutli-hop FCoE etc. You might not go out and replace all your existing brocade/MDS devices in your datacenter, but you certainly can start with the N5K and expand as needed. Makes a great unit for a lab incorporating both FC and 10G switching in one devices.
Robert
03-21-2010 07:41 AM
Thank you.
Questions answered!
06-21-2010 02:19 AM
Thanks Rob for that, i have a scenario whereby i have an IBM Blade center fully populated with 10 blades and a BNT Virtual Fabric 10G Switch Module (10-port).on the other end i have one EMC clarion CX120 that requires 4 FC ports. kindly advice whether it will be fine to connect the storage directly to the Nexus 5k. on the cisco config tool, i cannot find the part number for the FC ports also give me that.
cheers
Isaac
06-21-2010 02:34 AM
Isaac,
You can connect a EMC Clarrion CX 120 directly to the Nexus 5k. You will have to acquire the expansion module with FC Ports.
You can choose from one (or more) of these 2:
N5K-M1404 | N5000 1000 Series Mod 4x10GE 4xFC 4/2/1G(req SFP+/SFP) |
N5K-M1008 | N5000 1000 Series Module 8xFC 4/2/1 G (req SFP) |
Cheers
Nuno Ferreira
08-11-2010 03:47 AM
can someone explain this clearly to me...
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/solutions/Enterprise/Data_Center/Virtualization/securecldg.html
the design guide above recommends that i use a nexus 5k to aggregate the the fabric interconnects. i thought the UCS 6120 is sufficient enough to connect the storage MDS's and also to connect to the 7k aggregation switch.
if i decide not to use the Nexus 5k in my access layer and connect the MDS's to the expansion modules in the fabric interconnects and also have the fabric interconnects uplink directly to the Nexus 7k, what features do i stand to loose out on. or rather, if i incorporate the Nexus 5k between the fabric interconnects and the Nexus 7k, does it give me a more scalable solution and how??
also see attached design with no nexus 5k recommended by cisco
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