Users Guide

Virtual Server Networking
Virtual server networking (VSN) is supported on the S4810, S4820T, S5000, and MXL switch platforms.
As a part of the Open Automation package, VSN provides real-time communication between the Dell EMC Network fabric and the virtual
servers to automate network management and conguration tasks throughout the data center. VSN provides a closed-loop provisioning
system; for example, the automatic reprovisioning of virtual local area networks (VLANs) and port proles across multiple switches
simultaneously, thereby increasing employee productivity and minimizing human error.
Because Open Automation supports hypervisors from multiple vendors, data center managers can use a single mechanism to
simultaneously support multiple hypervisors and their current management tools.
VSN installs as a self-contained package and requires the Smart Scripting package.
NOTE: VSN is supported only on standalone switches and VMware virtual distributed switches (VDS); it is not supported in
stacked congurations.
Topics:
Overview
Install VSN
Installing VSN
Enabling VSN in a Hypervisor Session
Changing VSN Settings
Discovery
Connectivity
Running VSN Scripts
Disabling a Hypervisor Session
Removing a Hypervisor Session
Uninstalling VSN
Viewing VSN Information
Overview
Virtual server networking is an Open Automation tool that enables Dell EMC Networking switches and routers in a data center network to
retrieve conguration information from hypervisors. VMware vSphere and Citrix Xen hypervisors are supported.
Both VMware and Citrix Xen provide software development kits (SDKs) and application programming interfaces (APIs) for accessing their
conguration objects. VSN requires Layer 3 connectivity to access a hypervisor.
The following shows an example of the network architecture in which a Dell EMC Networking OS switch connects to multiple servers, each
of which may run a dierent type of hypervisor. The vCenter hypervisor from VMware is a centralized server management system that
manages multiple vSphere operating systems on which multiple virtual machines (VMs) run. The VMware ESX server is a single unit, that
can be managed by the hypervisor or act as an independent unit. The Citrix Xen hypervisor uses a distributed management methodology
under which a number of XenServers is grouped in a management domain, with a master server managing the other units in the domain.
Minimal packet drops may be seen when migrating VMS from one server to another. The drops may vary from one second or higher,
depending on the load on the server and network.
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