342 Optimizing fabric behavior
• If failover is disabled, non-TI zone traffic is blocked because it cannot use the dedicated ISL, which
is the lowest cost path.
For example, in
Figure 44
, there is a dedicated path between Domain 1 and Domain 3, and another,
non-dedicated, path that passes through Domain 2. If failover is enabled, all traffic will use the dedicated
path, because the non-dedicated path is not the shortest path. If failover is disabled, only non-TI zone
traffic is blocked because the non-dedicated path is not the shortest path.
Figure 44
Dedicated path is the shortest path
In
Figure 45
, a dedicated path between Domain 1 and Domain 4 exists, but is not the shortest path. In this
situation, if failover is enabled, the TI zone traffic uses the shortest path, even though the E_Ports are not in
the TI zone. If failover is disabled, the TI zone traffic stops until the dedicated path is configured to be the
shortest path.
Figure 45
Dedicated path is not the shortest path
NOTE:
For information about setting or displaying the FSPF cost of a path, see the
linkCost
and
topologyShow
commands in the
Fabric OS Command Reference
.
Traffic Isolation Routing over FC routers
This section describes how TI zones work with Fibre Channel routing (TI over FCR). See Chapter 17, ”
Using
the FC-FC routing service
” on page 367 for information about FC routers, phantom switches, and the
FC-FC Routing Service.
Some VE_Port-based features, such as tape pipelining, require the request and corresponding response
traffic to traverse the same VE_Port tunnel across the metaSAN. To ensure that the request and response
traverse the same VE_Port tunnel, you must set up Traffic Isolation zones in the edge and backbone fabrics.
7
12
3
14
15
16
Domain 1
Domain 3
Domain 4
Domain 2
8
1
9
6
9
5
= Dedicated Path
= Ports in the TI zone
7
12
3
14
15
16
Domain 1
Domain 3
Domain 4
Domain 2
8
1
9
6
9
5
= Dedicated Path
= Ports in the TI zone
Summary of Contents for A7533A - Brocade 4Gb SAN Switch Base
Page 1: ...HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 6 2 administrator guide Part number 5697 0016 Edition May 2009 ...
Page 24: ...24 ...
Page 99: ...Fabric OS 6 2 administrator guide 99 ...
Page 100: ...100 Managing user accounts ...
Page 118: ...116 Configuring standard security features ...
Page 164: ...162 Configuring advanced security features ...
Page 234: ...232 Installing and maintaining firmware ...
Page 268: ...266 Administering advanced zoning ...
Page 284: ...282 Configuring Enterprise class platforms ...
Page 292: ...290 Routing traffic ...
Page 294: ...292 Interoperability for merged SANs ...
Page 302: ...300 Configuring the Distributed Management Server ...
Page 334: ...332 iSCSI gateway service ...
Page 340: ...338 Administering NPIV ...
Page 407: ...Fabric OS 6 2 administrator guide 405 ...
Page 408: ...406 Using the FC FC routing service ...
Page 438: ...434 Administering extended fabrics ...
Page 460: ...456 Administering ISL trunking ...
Page 516: ...512 FICON fabrics ...
Page 526: ...522 Configuring and monitoring FICON Extension Services ...
Page 540: ...536 Configuring the PID format ...
Page 544: ...540 Understanding legacy password behavior ...
Page 546: ...542 Mixed fabric configurations for non merge SANs ...
Page 550: ...546 Migrating from an MP Router to a 400 MP Router ...
Page 558: ...554 Inband Management ...
Page 572: ...568 ...