336 Administering ISL Trunking
Monitoring traffic
To implement ISL Trunking effectively, you must monitor fabric traffic to identify congested paths or to
identify frequently dropped links. While monitoring changes in traffic patterns, you can adjust the fabric
design accordingly, such as by adding, removing, or reconfiguring ISLs and trunking groups in
problem areas.
There are three methods of monitoring fabric traffic:
•
Advanced Performance Monitoring
monitors traffic flow and allows you to view the impact of different
fabric configurations on performance. Refer to ”
Administering Advanced Performance Monitoring
(APM)
” on page 327 for additional information.
•
Fabric Watch
allows you to monitor traffic flow through specified ports on the switch and send alerts
when the traffic exceeds or drops below configurable thresholds. Refer to the
Fabric Watch
Administrator’s Guide
for additional information.
•
Use the
portPerfShow
command as described in the following procedure to record traffic volume for
each port in your fabric over time.
To use the
portPerfShow
command
1.
Connect to the switch and log in as admin.
2.
Enter the following command:
where
interval
is the number of seconds between each data-gathering sample (the default is one
sample every second).
3.
Record the traffic flow for each port participating in an ISL.
4.
Repeat
step 1
through
step 3
for each switch in the fabric until all ISL traffic flow is captured.
In a large fabric, it might be necessary to only identify and capture the key ISLs. However, you might
want to continue this process throughout the day (or an entire work cycle), to capture varying traffic
patterns under different conditions.
The following example shows a switch without trunking, and indicates that ports 0 through 2 are
underutilized and ports 4 and 5 are congested:
The following example shows traffic flowing through a trunking group (ports 5, 6, and 7). After port 6
fails, traffic is redistributed over the remaining two links in the group, ports 5 and 7:
portperfshow
[interval]
switch:admin>
portperfshow
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Total
--------------------------------------------------------------------
0
0
0
145m
204m
202m
0
168m 719
0
0
0
145m
206m
208m
0
186m 745
switch:admin>
switch:admin>
portperfshow
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Total
--------------------------------------------------------------------
0
0
0
0
0
145m
144m
145m
434
0
0
0
0
0
144m
143m
144m 431
0
0
0
0
0
162m
0
162m
324
0
0
0
0
0
186m
0
186m 372
0
0
0
0
0
193m
0
192m 385
0
0
0
0
0
202m
0
202m 404
0
0
0
0
0
209m
0
209m 418
switch:admin>
Summary of Contents for AE370A - Brocade 4Gb SAN Switch 4/12
Page 18: ...18 ...
Page 82: ...82 Managing user accounts ...
Page 102: ...102 Configuring standard security features ...
Page 126: ...126 Maintaining configurations ...
Page 198: ...198 Routing traffic ...
Page 238: ...238 Using the FC FC routing service ...
Page 260: ...260 Administering FICON fabrics ...
Page 280: ...280 Working with diagnostic features ...
Page 332: ...332 Administering Extended Fabrics ...
Page 414: ...398 Configuring the PID format ...
Page 420: ...404 Configuring interoperability mode ...
Page 426: ...410 Understanding legacy password behaviour ...
Page 442: ...426 ...
Page 444: ......
Page 447: ......