B-series fabric groups
In B-series routing configurations, devices in different fabrics can be grouped to form LSANs. An LSAN
is similar to a Fibre Channel zone, but can extend through a router to include devices in other fabrics.
This configuration, which includes the physical fabrics (subnetworks), LSANs, and router, is called a
Meta SAN
. A Meta SAN consolidates multiple fabrics into a single entity.
Figure 16
shows Fabric 1, Fabric 2, and Fabric 3, each containing one or more switches. Any B-series
switch can be used in these fabrics. In each fabric, the switches must use the same version of switch
firmware for like switches and must have the same variable settings (for example, R_A_TOV). Each
fabric has a unique set of fabric services. See “
B-series switches and fabric rules
” on page 93 for
fabric restrictions.
Fabrics connected with routing must comply with configuration rules for a routed fabric. (See “
1606
Extension SAN Switch and DC Dir Switch MP Extension Blade fabric rules
” on page 112,
“
Fibre Channel routing, 400 MP Router, and MP Router Blade fabric rules
” on page 116, and
“
MP Router fabric rules
” on page 121.) The fabrics can have identical domain names and zoning
definitions.
The 1606 Extension SAN Switches or DC Dir Switch MP Extension Blades and MP Routers also provide
FCIP capabilities, allowing implementation of Fibre Channel routing and FCIP SAN extension. (See
Integration of Fibre Channel routing and FCIP
on page 76.)
B-series fabric partitioning using Virtual Fabrics
In B-series configurations, a switched fabric is partitioned into several Virtual Fabrics (
Figure 17
).
Each Virtual Fabric has its own set of resources, such as administrator and users, Name Server, and
zoning database. Devices can be shared across multiple Virtual Fabric administrative domains using
IFR, thus increasing resource sharing. B-series Virtual Fabrics and Virtual Fabrics with IFR are included
on all B-series switches using firmware 5.2
x
(or later) without the need for a router.
B-series Virtual Fabrics architecture
In B-series configurations, a switched fabric is partitioned into several logical switches and logical
fabrics
Figure 17
) by using the Virtual Fabrics feature. Logical switches within a physical switch can
be created by dividing the switch ports and assigning them to individual logical switches. An FID also
must be configured to each logical switch. A logical fabric is a fabric that contains at least one logical
switch; but logical switches can be connected to other logical switches with the same FID to form
logical fabrics across multiple switches. Devices can be shared across multiple logical fabrics using
IFR, thus increasing resource sharing. B-series Virtual Fabrics and Virtual Fabrics with IFR are included
on B-series switch model:s DC SAN Backbone Director, DC04 Director, 8/80 SAN Switch and 8/40
SAN Switch only.
C-series fabric partitioning
In C-series configurations, a single fabric is partitioned into several subnetworks or logical groups of
switches or switch ports called VSANs. The group of VSANs is called a SAN.
Figure 18
shows VSAN 1, VSAN 2, and VSAN 3, each a set of switch ports on one or more C-series
switches. A VSAN can extend across multiple switches. Each VSAN has a unique set of fabric services
with independent fabric management. VSANs can share devices by using the license-enabled IVR
function. IVR is distributed across all switches in the SAN, and there is no separate router hardware.
Because the switches are a connected set, they must run the same version of switch firmware.
Fibre Channel routing
66
Summary of Contents for StorageWorks 4000/6000/8000 - Enterprise Virtual Arrays
Page 26: ......
Page 34: ...SAN design overview 34 ...
Page 60: ...SAN fabric topologies 60 ...
Page 80: ...Fibre Channel routing 80 ...
Page 82: ......
Page 92: ...H series switches and fabric rules 92 ...
Page 156: ...C series switches and fabric rules 156 ...
Page 182: ...SAN fabric connectivity and switch interoperability rules 182 ...
Page 184: ......
Page 270: ...XP and VA storage system rules 270 ...
Page 276: ...Enterprise Backup Solution 276 ...
Page 278: ......
Page 354: ...SAN extension 354 ...
Page 398: ...Network Attached Storage 398 ...
Page 400: ......
Page 416: ...Storage security 416 ...
Page 428: ...Best practices 428 ...
Page 456: ...456 ...