Fabric OS 5.2.x administrator guide 367
21 Configuring and monitoring FCIP tunneling
The Fibre Channel over IP (FCIP) Tunneling Service is an optional feature that enables you to use Fibre
Channel “tunnels” to connect SANs over IP-based networks. An FCIP tunnel transports data between a pair
of Fibre Channel switches. You can have more than one TCP connection between the pair of Fibre Channel
switches. However, from the Fibre Channel fabric point of view, the FCIP tunnel is just a connection
between switches, and all the IP network and protocols remain invisible.
Supported platforms for FCIP
Fabric OS supports FCIP ISLs between two SilkWorm switches (SilkWorm 7500 or SilkWorm 48000 with
an FR4-18i blade).
The GbE ports on the FC4-16IP do not support FCIP tunneling.
NOTE:
The Fabric OS 5.2.0 FCIP Tunneling Service is not compatible with the XPath FCIP service; nor is
it compatible with any other vendor’s implementation
.
About FCIP tunneling
FCIP tunneling enables you to connect fabrics over an IP connection. Depending on the port type you
select, the fabrics can merge or remain separate, while sharing devices. This enables you, for example, to
connect one central office to different branch offices without having to merge the fabrics.
The port types for FCIP tunneling are either VE_Port or VEX_Port. An FCIP tunnel using VE_Ports will merge
the two fabrics, and an FCIP tunnel using a VEX_Port will not merge the fabrics. A VEX_Port can only
connect to a VE_Port.
Fibre Channel frame encapsulation on one port and the reconstruction of Fibre Channel frames on the
other port is transparent to the initiator and target.
Fabric OS supports FCIP ISLs between two supported HP StorageWorks switches (400 MP Router or 4/256
SAN Director with B-Series MP Router blade) or routers.
The tunnel on each GbE port are numbered 0 through 7, and each tunnel corresponds to a virtual GbE
port. For example, tunnel 0 on GbE port 0 corresponds to logical FC port 16; tunnel 1 on GbE port 1
corresponds to logical FC port 25. The GbE physical ports enable you to configure the following tunnels
and corresponding virtual ports:
Table 89
Tunnels and virtual port numbering once configured
Physical ports
Tunnels
(portshow fciptunnel
slot/ge)
Virtual ports
(switchshow
ge0
0 through 7
16 through 23
(area numbers might be different
depending on the slot chosen for
the B-Series MP Router blade)
ge1
0 through 7
24 through 31
(area numbers might be different
depending on the slot chosen for
the B-Series MP Router blade)
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: ......