HP 2000fc HP StorageWorks 2012fc Modular Smart Array user guide (481597-001, M - Page 41

Using Host Port Interconnects, Using Loop or Point-to-Point Topology

Page 41 highlights

Using Host Port Interconnects When the internal connections between host ports are enabled through SMU, host port 0 on each controller is internally connected to host port 1 on the other controller. This provides redundancy in the event one controller fails (failover) by making volumes owned by the failed controller accessible on the surviving controller. Enable port interconnects when controller enclosures are attached directly to hosts and high availability is required, or when switch ports are at a premium and fault tolerance is required but highest performance is not. When ports are not interconnected, volumes owned by a controller are accessible from two of its host ports only. Use this default setting when controller enclosures are attached through one or more switches, or when they are attached directly but performance is more important than availability. Using Loop or Point-to-Point Topology MSA2000 Family 2012fc Modular Smart Arrays use Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop (loop) topology by default. Using loop topology enables hosts to see all volumes on all ports after failover. Use loop topology, where possible, as it provides the most flexible and hostindependent, fault-tolerant configuration. Point-to-point topology restricts the ability for the system to present volumes from both controllers after a failover, limiting the overall configuration choices. When ports are interconnected, you can use loop topology only. When ports are not interconnected, you can use either loop or point-to-point topology. Note - Point-to-point topology is supported for switch attach configurations only. For information on how controllers present volumes to data hosts, see the reference guide. Chapter 3 Connecting Hosts 41

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Chapter 3
Connecting Hosts
41
Using Host Port Interconnects
When the internal connections between host ports are enabled through SMU, host
port 0 on each controller is internally connected to host port 1 on the other
controller. This provides redundancy in the event one controller fails (failover) by
making volumes owned by the failed controller accessible on the surviving
controller.
Enable port interconnects when controller enclosures are attached directly to hosts
and high availability is required, or when switch ports are at a premium and fault
tolerance is required but highest performance is not.
When ports are not interconnected, volumes owned by a controller are accessible
from two of its host ports only. Use this default setting when controller enclosures
are attached through one or more switches, or when they are attached directly but
performance is more important than availability.
Using Loop or Point-to-Point Topology
MSA2000 Family 2012fc Modular Smart Arrays use Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop
(loop) topology by default.
Using loop topology enables hosts to see all volumes on all ports after failover. Use
loop topology, where possible, as it provides the most flexible and host-
independent, fault-tolerant configuration. Point-to-point topology restricts the ability
for the system to present volumes from both controllers after a failover, limiting the
overall configuration choices.
When ports are interconnected, you can use loop topology only. When ports are not
interconnected, you can use either loop or point-to-point topology.
Note –
Point-to-point topology is supported for switch attach configurations only.
For information on how controllers present volumes to data hosts, see the
reference
guide
.