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Book Contents Book ContentsCisco UCS Manager Infrastructure Management Guide, Release 3.1
The chassis/FEX discovery policy determines how the system reacts when you add a new chassis or FEX. Cisco UCS Manager uses the settings in the chassis/FEX discovery policy to determine the minimum threshold for the number of links between the chassis or FEX and the fabric interconnect and whether to group links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect in a fabric port channel.
In a Cisco UCS Mini setup, chassis discovery policy is supported only on the extended chassis .
If you have a Cisco UCS domain with some of the chassis' wired with one link, some with two links, some with four links, and some with eight links, Cisco recommends configuring the chassis/FEX discovery policy for the minimum number links in the domain so that Cisco UCS Manager can discover all chassis.
To establish the highest available chassis connectivity in a Cisco UCS domain where Fabric Interconnect is connected to different types of IO Modules supporting different max number of uplinks, select platform max value. Setting the platform max ensures that Cisco UCS Manager discovers the chassis including the connections and servers only when the maximum supported IOM uplinks are connected per IO Module.
After the initial discovery, re-acknowledge the chassis' that are wired for a greater number of links and Cisco UCS Manager configures the chassis to use all available links.
Cisco UCS Manager cannot discover any chassis that is wired for fewer links than are configured in the chassis/FEX discovery policy. For example, if the chassis/FEX discovery policy is configured for four links, Cisco UCS Manager cannot discover any chassis that is wired for one link or two links. Re-acknowledgement of the chassis resolves this issue.
The following table provides an overview of how the chassis/FEX discovery policy works in a multi-chassis Cisco UCS domain :
Table 1 Chassis/FEX Discovery Policy and Chassis Links
1 link between IOM and fabric interconnects
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 1 link.
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
2 links between IOM and fabric interconnects
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 1 link.
After initial discovery, reacknowledge the chassis and Cisco UCS Manager recognizes and uses the additional links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 2 link.
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
4 links between IOM and fabric interconnects
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 1 link.
After initial discovery, reacknowledge the chassis and Cisco UCS Manager recognizes and uses the additional links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 2 links.
After initial discovery, reacknowledge the chassis and Cisco UCS Manager recognizes and uses the additional links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 4 link.
Chassis connections and servers cannot be discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and are not added to the Cisco UCS domain .
If the IOM has 4 links, the chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 4 links.
If the IOM has 8 links, the chassis is not fully discovered by Cisco UCS Manager .
8 links between IOM and fabric interconnects
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 1 link.
After initial discovery, reacknowledge the chassis and Cisco UCS Manager recognizes and uses the additional links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 2 links.
After initial discovery, reacknowledge the chassis and Cisco UCS Manager recognizes and uses the additional links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 4 links.
After initial discovery, reacknowledge the chassis and Cisco UCS Manager recognizes and uses the additional links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 8 links.
Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 8 links.
For hardware configurations that support fabric port channels, link grouping determines whether all of the links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are grouped in to a fabric port channel during chassis discovery. If the link grouping preference is set to Port Channel , all of the links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are grouped in a fabric port channel. If set to None , links from the IOM are pinned to the fabric interconnect.
After a fabric port channel is created through Cisco UCS Manager , you can add or remove links by changing the link group preference and re-acknowledging the chassis, or by enabling or disabling the chassis from the port channel.
The link grouping preference only takes effect if both sides of the links between an IOM or FEX and the fabric interconnect support fabric port channels. If one side of the links does not support fabric port channels, this preference is ignored and the links are not grouped in a port channel.
In a port channel, by default, ingress multicast traffic on any port in the fabric interconnect (FI) selects a particular link between the IOM and the fabric interconnect to egress the traffic. To reduce potential issues with the bandwidth, and to provide effective load balancing of the ingress multicast traffic, hardware hashing is used for multicast traffic. When multicast hardware hashing is enabled, all links between the IOM and the fabric interconnect in a port channel can be used for multicast traffic.
Pinning in Cisco UCS is only relevant to uplink ports. If you configure Link Grouping Preference as None during chassis discovery, the IOM forwards traffic from a specific server to the fabric interconnect through its uplink ports by using static route pinning.
The following table showcases how pinning is done between an IOM and the fabric interconnect based on the number of active fabric links between the IOM and the fabric interconnect.
Number of Active Fabric Links
Server slot pinned to fabric link
All the HIF ports are pinned to the active link
8-Link (Applies only to 2208XP )
Only 1,2,4 and 8 links are supported. 3,5,6, and 7 links are not valid configurations.
While pinning traffic from a specific server to an uplink port provides you with greater control over the unified fabric and ensures optimal utilization of uplink port bandwidth, it could also mean excessive traffic over certain circuits. This issue can be overcome by using port channeling. Port channeling groups all links between the IOM and the fabric interconnect into one port channel. The port channel uses a load balancing algorithm to decide the link over which to send traffic. This results in optimal traffic management.
Cisco UCS supports port-channeling only through the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP). For hardware configurations that support fabric port channels, link grouping determines whether all of the links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are grouped into a fabric port channel during chassis discovery. If the Link Grouping Preference is set to Port Channel , all of the links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are grouped in a fabric port channel. If this parameter is set to None , links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are not grouped in a fabric port channel.
Once a fabric port channel is created, links can be added or removed by changing the link group preference and reacknowledging the chassis, or by enabling or disabling the chassis from the port channel.
To customize fabric port channel connectivity for a specific chassis, configure the chassis connectivity policy.
The chassis connectivity policy determines the whether a specific chassis is included in a fabric port channel after chassis discovery. This policy is helpful for users who want to configure one or more chassis differently from what is specified in the global chassis discovery policy. The chassis connectivity policy also allows for different connectivity modes per fabric interconnect, further expanding the level of control offered with regards to chassis connectivity.
By default, the chassis connectivity policy is set to global. This means that connectivity control is configured when the chassis is newly discovered, using the settings configured in the chassis discovery policy. Once the chassis is discovered, the chassis connectivity policy controls whether the connectivity control is set to none or port channel.
The 40G backplane setting is not applicable for 22xx IOMs.
The chassis connectivity policy is created by Cisco UCS Manager only when the hardware configuration supports fabric port channels.
In a Cisco UCS Mini setup, the creation of a chassis connectivity policy is supported only on the extended chassis .
The 40G backplane setting is not applicable for 22xx IOMs.
Changing the connectivity mode for a chassis might result in decreased VIF namespace.
Changing the connectivity mode for a chassis results in chassis re-acknowledgement. Traffic might be disrupted during this time.
ProcedureThe rack server discovery policy determines how the system reacts when you add a new rack-mount server. Cisco UCS Manager uses the settings in the rack server discovery policy to determine whether any data on the hard disks are scrubbed and whether server discovery occurs immediately or needs to wait for explicit user acknowledgement.
Cisco UCS Manager cannot discover any rack-mount server that has not been correctly cabled and connected to the fabric interconnects. For information about how to integrate a supported Cisco UCS rack-mount server with Cisco UCS Manager , see the appropriate rack-mount server integration guide.
To efficiently switch packets between ports, the fabric interconnect maintains a MAC address table. It dynamically builds the MAC address table by using the MAC source address from the packets received and the associated port on which the packets were learned. The fabric interconnect uses an aging mechanism, defined by a configurable aging timer, to determine how long an entry remains in the MAC address table. If an address remains inactive for a specified number of seconds, it is removed from the MAC address table.
You can configure the amount of time (age) that a MAC address entry (MAC address and associated port) remains in the MAC address table.