BLADE OS™ Application Guide HP GbE2c Ethernet Blade Switch for c-Class BladeSystem Version 5.1 Advanced Functionality Software
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Part 1: Basic Switching
- Accessing the Switch
- The Management Network
- Local Management Using the Console Port
- The Command Line Interface
- Remote Management Access
- Client IP Address Agents
- Securing Access to the Switch
- Setting Allowable Source IP Address Ranges
- RADIUS Authentication and Authorization
- TACACS+ Authentication
- LDAP Authentication and Authorization
- Secure Shell and Secure Copy
- Configuring SSH/SCP Features on the Switch
- Configuring the SCP Administrator Password
- Using SSH and SCP Client Commands
- SSH and SCP Encryption of Management Messages
- Generating RSA Host and Server Keys for SSH Access
- SSH/SCP Integration with Radius Authentication
- SSH/SCP Integration with TACACS+ Authentication
- End User Access Control
- Ports and Trunking
- Port-Based Network Access Control
- VLANs
- Spanning Tree Protocol
- RSTP and MSTP
- Link Layer Discovery Protocol
- Quality of Service
- Accessing the Switch
- Part 2: IP Routing
- Basic IP Routing
- Routing Information Protocol
- IGMP
- OSPF
- OSPF Overview
- OSPF Implementation in BLADE OS
- OSPF Configuration Examples
- Remote Monitoring
- Part 3: High Availability Fundamentals
- High Availability
- Layer 2 Failover
- Server Link Failure Detection
- VRRP Overview
- Failover Methods
- BLADE OS Extensions to VRRP
- Virtual Router Deployment Considerations
- High Availability Configurations
- High Availability
- Part 4: Appendices
- Index
BLADE OS 5.1 Application Guide
14 Figures BMD00113, September 2009
Chapter 12: OSPF
Figure 20: OSPF Area Types
192
Figure 21: OSPF Domain and an Autonomous System
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Figure 22: Injecting Default Routes
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Figure 23: OSPF Authentication
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Figure 24: A Simple OSPF Domain
207
Figure 25: Configuring a Virtual Link
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Figure 26: Summarizing Routes
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Chapter 14: High Availability
Figure 27: Basic Layer 2 Failover
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Figure 28: Two Trunks, with Each in a Different Failover Trigger
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Figure 29: Two Trunks, with One Failover Trigger
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Figure 30: Server Link Failure Detection
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Figure 31: A Non-VRRP, Hot-Standby Configuration
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Figure 32: Active-Active Redundancy
243
Figure 33: Active-Active High-Availability Configuration
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Appendix A: Troubleshooting
Figure 34: Mirroring Ports
256