
A-6
Appendix A
Fibre Channel Overview
Working With Fibre Channel
Working With Fibre Channel
Fibre Channel is a transport protocol. Differing from protocols such as
SCSI, Fibre Channel does not use data manipulation commands. An
addressing scheme with advance handshaking requirements verifies
that data was transferred correctly.
Fibre Channel specifications are divided into multi-layered, functional
levels. The five layers define the physical media and transmission rates,
encoding scheme, framing protocol and flow control, common services,
and the upper-level protocol interfaces. Each section of the Fibre
Channel specification can be changed without affecting other sections.
Upper level specifications for Fibre Channel map commands and data
from different supported protocols to the Fibre Channel system. The
mapped commands and data are then segmented into frame sequences.
Each frame is encoded and sent to the desired target device. At the target
device, the frames are decoded and reassembled into the original
sequence. The data in the sequence is extracted and then processed by
the target system. This whole process is done without knowledge of the
contents of the information being transferred.
Because Fibre Channel supports many different communication
protocols, the highest level of the Fibre Channel specifications identify
the type of communication protocol encoded. As information is divided
into sequences of frames, Fibre Channel attaches address and sequence
information to each packet. This transport protocol is required to
reconstruct the original information into its original form.
More complex than simply dividing information up into frames and
sending it to an address, Fibre Channel also has special frames to pass
the following Fibre Channel-specific information between devices:
• New devices added to the system
• All device addresses
• How and when data can be transferred
• Problem detection
Summary of Contents for 2100 ER
Page 10: ...x Contents ...
Page 12: ...xii Tables ...
Page 14: ...xiv Figures ...
Page 15: ...1 1 Introduction 1 Introduction ...
Page 24: ...1 10 Chapter1 Introduction Fibre Channel Configurations ...
Page 25: ...2 1 Setting Up the Fibre Bridge 2 Setting Up the Fibre Bridge ...
Page 36: ...2 12 Chapter2 Setting Up the Fibre Bridge Installing Cables ...
Page 37: ...3 1 Operating the Fibre Bridge 3 Operating the Fibre Bridge ...
Page 51: ...4 1 Troubleshooting Guide 4 Troubleshooting Guide ...
Page 58: ...4 8 Chapter4 Troubleshooting Guide Troubleshooting ...
Page 59: ...A 1 Fibre Channel Overview A Fibre Channel Overview ...
Page 70: ...A 12 AppendixA Fibre Channel Overview Problems with Fibre Channel ...
Page 71: ...B 1 Support and Customer Service B Support and Customer Service ...
Page 82: ...B 12 AppendixB Support and Customer Service Hewlett Packard Customer Support ...
Page 83: ...C 1 Safety and Regulatory C Safety and Regulatory Information ...
Page 86: ...C 4 AppendixC Safety and Regulatory Information Chapter Overview ...