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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP Software Configuration Guide
OL-8915-03
Chapter 1 Overview
Design Concepts for Using the Switch
•
QoS is disabled. For more information, see
Chapter 32, “Configuring QoS.”
•
No EtherChannels are configured. For more information, see
Chapter 33, “Configuring
EtherChannels and Layer 2 Trunk Failover.”
•
IP unicast routing is disabled. For more information, see
Chapter 34, “Configuring IP Unicast
Routing.”
•
No HSRP groups are configured. For more information, see
Chapter 38, “Configuring HSRP and
Enhanced Object Tracking.”
Design Concepts for Using the Switch
As your network users compete for network bandwidth, it takes longer to send and receive data. When
you configure your network, consider the bandwidth required by your network users and the relative
priority of the network applications that they use.
Table 1-1
describes what can cause network performance to degrade and how you can configure your
network to increase the bandwidth available to your network users.
Bandwidth alone is not the only consideration when designing your network. As your network traffic
profiles evolve, consider providing network services that can support applications for voice and data
integration, multimedia integration, application prioritization, and security.
Table 1-2
describes some
network demands and how you can meet them.
Table 1-1
Increasing Network Performance
Network Demands
Suggested Design Methods
Too many users on a single network
segment and a growing number of
users accessing the Internet
•
Create smaller network segments so that fewer users share the bandwidth, and use
VLANs and IP subnets to place the network resources in the same logical network
as the users who access those resources most.
•
Use full-duplex operation between the switch and its connected workstations.
•
Increased power of new PCs,
workstations, and servers
•
High bandwidth demand from
networked applications (such as
e-mail with large attached files)
and from bandwidth-intensive
applications (such as
multimedia)
•
Connect global resources—such as servers and routers to which the network users
require equal access—directly to the high-speed switch ports so that they have
their own high-speed segment.
•
Use the EtherChannel feature between the switch and its connected servers and
routers.