424 Administering extended fabrics
The following table describes Fibre Channel data frames.
NOTE:
The term byte used in
Table 81
equals 8 bits. The maximum Fibre Channel frame is 2148 bytes.
You can allocate buffer credit using the
portCfgLongDistance
command, which allows you to allocate
sufficient numbers of full-size frame buffers on a particular port or to support a long- distance link. Only
E_Ports can be configured for extended distances. Changes made by this command are persistent across
switch reboots and power cycles.
Enter the
portCfgLongDistance
command to select one of the following four options for buffer credit
allocation:
NOTE:
Long distance modes L0.5, L1, and L2 are not supported on Fabric OS 6.x.
•
Level 0 static mode (L0)–L0 is the normal (default) mode for a port. Each user port reserves eight buffer
credits and competes with other ports for additional buffer credits. No buffer credits are reserved for
extended distance ISLs.
•
Level E static mode (LE)–LE reserves a static number of buffer credits, which supports distances up to 10
km. The number reserved depends on the port speed. The baseline for the calculation is one credit per
km at 2 Gb/s. This yields the following values for 10 km:
• 5 credits per port at 1 Gb/s
• 10 credits per port at 2 Gb/s
• 20 credits per port at 4 Gb/s
• 40 credits per port at 8 Gb/s
•
Dynamic Mode (LD)–LD calculates buffer credits based on the distance measured during port
initialization. An upper limit is placed on the calculation by providing a desired distance value. If the
measured distance is more than desired distance, the desired distance is used in the calculation;
otherwise, the measured distance is used. This is a mechanism for controlling the number of reserved
buffer credits ensure buffer availability for other ports in the same group.
•
Static long-distance mode (LS)–LS calculates a fixed number of buffer credits based on a desired
distance value.
NOTE:
For the LD and LS distance levels, see ”
Determining how many ports can be used for long
distance
” on page 425 to get an approximation of the calculated number of buffer credits.
Table 81
Fibre Channel data frames
Fibre Channel Frame fields
Field size
Start of frame
4 bytes
32 bits
Standard frame header
24 bytes
192 bits
Data (payload)
0–2112 bytes
0–16,896 bits
CRC
4 bytes
32 bits
End of frame
4 bytes
32 bits
Total
(Number bits/frame)
36–2148 bytes
288–17,184 bits
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 ...