DCFM Professional Plus User Manual (53-1001774-01, June 2010)

DCFM Professional Plus User Manual 419
53-1001774-01
16
FCIP configuration guidelines
FCIP configuration always involves two or more extension switches. The following should take place
first before you configure a working FCIP connection from the Management application:
The WAN link should be provisioned and tested for integrity.
Cabling within the data center should be completed.
Equipment should be physically installed and powered on.
The Management application must have management port access to the extension switches.
The Management application must be able to discover the fabrics the contain the extension
switches.
The extension switches should be physically connected to the IP network they will be using to
pass data, and the connection should be active and working.
Identify all the devices in the data path between the extension switches, including Ethernet
switches, Ethernet routers, firewalls, and common carrier equipment. A network diagram is
very helpful. Support engineers may ask you to provide a network diagram when
troubleshooting problems.
Routers and firewalls must be configured to pass ARP, ICMP, and IP layer 3 protocols.
Persistently disable the VE_ports before you configure them. Ports on a new extension switch
or extension blade are persistently disabled by default.
Determine which features you are implementing, and gather the information needed to
implement those features. Table 24 summarizes feature support per FCIP platform.
Virtual Port Types
Virtual ports may be defined as VE_Ports.
VE_Ports
VE_Ports (virtual E_Ports) are used to create interswitch links (ISLs) through an FCIP tunnel. If
VE_Ports are used on both ends of an FCIP tunnel, the fabrics connected by the tunnel are
merged.