Dell PowerEdge XL 5133-4 MXL 10/40GbE Switch IO Module FTOS Command Reference - Page 170

Server-Facing LAGs, LACP Modes, Auto-Con d LACP Timeout

Page 170 highlights

www.dell.com | support.dell.com Server-Facing LAGs Server-facing ports are configured as individual ports by default. If a server NIC is configured for LACP-based NIC teaming, server-facing ports are automatically configured as part of dynamic LAGs. The LAG range 1 to127 is reserved for server-facing LAGs. Once the Aggregator receives LACPDU from server-facing ports, the information embedded in the LACPDU (remote-system ID and port key) is used to form a server-facing LAG. The LAG/port-channel number is assigned based on the first available number in the range 1 to 127. For each unique remote system-id and port-key combination, a new LAG is formed and the port automatically becomes a member of the LAG. All ports with the same combination of system ID and port key automatically become members of the same LAG. Ports are automatically removed from the LAG if the NIC teaming configuration on a server-facing port changes or if the port goes operationally down. Also, a server-facing LAG is removed when the last port member is removed from the LAG. The benefit of supporting a dynamic LAG is that the Aggregator's server-facing ports can toggle between participating in the LAG or acting as individual ports based on the dynamic information exchanged with a server NIC. LACP supports the exchange of messages on a link to allow their LACP instances to: • Reach agreement on the identity of the LAG to which the link belongs. • Attach the link to that LAG. • Enable the transmission and reception functions in an orderly manner. • Detach the link from the LAG if one of the partner stops responding. LACP Modes The Aggregator supports only LACP active mode as the default mode of operation. In active mode, a port interface is considered to be not part of a LAG but rather in an active negotiating state. A port in active mode automatically initiates negotiations with other ports by sending LACP packets. If server-facing ports are configured for LACP-based NIC teaming, LACP negotiations will take place to aggregate the port in a dynamic LAG. If server-facing ports are not configured for LACP-based NIC teaming, a port will be treated as an individual port in the active negotiating state. Auto-Configured LACP Timeout LACPDUs are exchanged between port channel (LAG) interfaces to maintain LACP sessions. LACPDUs are transmitted at either at a slow or fast transmission rate, depending on the LACP timeout value configured on the partner system. The timeout value is the amount of time that a LAG interface waits for a PDU from the partner system before bringing the LACP session down. The default timeout is long-timeout (30 seconds) and is not user-configurable on the Aggregator. 156 | Link Aggregation

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156
|
Link Aggregation
www.dell.com | support.dell.com
Server-Facing LAGs
Server-facing ports are configured as individual ports by default. If a server NIC is configured for
LACP-based NIC teaming, server-facing ports are automatically configured as part of dynamic LAGs. The
LAG range 1 to127 is reserved for server-facing LAGs.
Once the Aggregator receives LACPDU from server-facing ports, the information embedded in the
LACPDU (remote-system ID and port key) is used to form a server-facing LAG. The LAG/port-channel
number is assigned based on the first available number in the range 1 to 127. For each unique remote
system-id and port-key combination, a new LAG is formed and the port automatically becomes a member
of the LAG.
All ports with the same combination of system ID and port key automatically become members of the
same LAG. Ports are automatically removed from the LAG if the NIC teaming configuration on a
server-facing port changes or if the port goes operationally down. Also, a server-facing LAG is removed
when the last port member is removed from the LAG.
The benefit of supporting a dynamic LAG is that the Aggregator's server-facing ports can toggle between
participating in the LAG or acting as individual ports based on the dynamic information exchanged with a
server NIC. LACP supports the exchange of messages on a link to allow their LACP instances to:
Reach agreement on the identity of the LAG to which the link belongs.
Attach the link to that LAG.
Enable the transmission and reception functions in an orderly manner.
Detach the link from the LAG if one of the partner stops responding.
LACP Modes
The Aggregator supports only LACP active mode as the default mode of operation. In active mode, a port
interface is considered to be not part of a LAG but rather in an active negotiating state.
A port in active mode automatically initiates negotiations with other ports by sending LACP packets. If
server-facing ports are configured for LACP-based NIC teaming, LACP negotiations will take place to
aggregate the port in a dynamic LAG. If server-facing ports are not configured for LACP-based NIC
teaming, a port will be treated as an individual port in the active negotiating state.
Auto-Configured LACP Timeout
LACPDUs are exchanged between port channel (LAG) interfaces to maintain LACP sessions. LACPDUs
are transmitted at either at a slow or fast transmission rate, depending on the LACP timeout value
configured on the partner system.
The timeout value is the amount of time that a LAG interface waits for a PDU from the partner system
before bringing the LACP session down. The default timeout is long-timeout (30 seconds) and is not
user-configurable on the Aggregator.