HP StorageWorks 1606 Brocade Fabric OS Administrator's Guide v6.3.0 (53-100133 - Page 103

Routing policies, Displaying the current routing policy

Page 103 highlights

Routing policies 4 Fibre Channel fabrics require that all ports be identified by a unique PID. In a single fabric, FC protocol guarantees that domain IDs are unique, and so a PID formed by a domain ID and area ID is unique within a fabric. However, the domain IDs and PIDs in one fabric may be duplicated within another fabric, just as IP addresses that are unique to one private network are likely to be duplicated within another private network. In an IP network, a network router can maintain network address translation (NAT) tables to replace private network addresses with public addresses when a packet is routed out of the private network, and to replace public addresses with private addresses when a packet is routed from the public network to the private network. The Fibre Channel routing equivalent to this IP-NAT is the Fibre Channel network address translation (FC-NAT). Using FC-NAT, the proxy devices in a fabric can have PIDs that are different from the real devices they represent, allowing the proxy devices to have appropriate PIDs for the address space of their corresponding fabric. Routing policies By default, all routing protocols place their routes into a routing table. You can control the routes that a protocol places into each table and the routes from that table that the protocol advertises by defining one or more routing policies and then applying them to the specific routing protocol. The routing policy is responsible for selecting a route based on one of two user-selected routing policies: • Port-based routing • Exchange-based routing On the Brocade 300, 4100, 4900, 5000, 5410, 5424, 5450, 5460, 5470, 5480, 5100, 5300, 5424, 7500, 7500E, 7600, 7800 and 8000 switches, the Brocade 48000 director, and the Brocade DCX and DCX-4S enterprise-class platforms (all 4 Gbps ASICs and later) routing is handled by the FSPF protocol and either the port-based routing or exchange-based routing policies. Each switch can have its own routing policy and different policies can exist in the same fabric. ATTENTION For most configurations, the default routing policy is optimal and provides the best performance. You should change the routing policy only if there is a performance issue that is of concern, or if a particular fabric configuration requires it. Displaying the current routing policy 1. Connect to the switch and log in as admin. 2. Enter the aptPolicy command with no parameters. The current policy is displayed, followed by the supported policies for the switch. Example of the output from the aptPolicy command. In the following example, the current policy is exchange-based routing (3) with the additional AP dedicated link policy. switch:admin> aptpolicy Current Policy: 3 1(ap) 3 0(ap): Default Policy 1: Port Based Routing Policy Fabric OS Administrator's Guide 61 53-1001336-01

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Fabric OS Administrator’s Guide
61
53-1001336-01
Routing policies
4
Fibre Channel fabrics require that all ports be identified by a unique PID. In a single fabric, FC
protocol guarantees that domain IDs are unique, and so a PID formed by a domain ID and area ID
is unique within a fabric. However, the domain IDs and PIDs in one fabric may be duplicated within
another fabric, just as IP addresses that are unique to one private network are likely to be
duplicated within another private network.
In an IP network, a network router can maintain network address translation (NAT) tables to
replace private network addresses with public addresses when a packet is routed out of the private
network, and to replace public addresses with private addresses when a packet is routed from the
public network to the private network. The Fibre Channel routing equivalent to this IP-NAT is the
Fibre Channel network address translation (FC-NAT). Using FC-NAT, the proxy devices in a fabric
can have PIDs that are different from the real devices they represent, allowing the proxy devices to
have appropriate PIDs for the address space of their corresponding fabric.
Routing policies
By default, all routing protocols place their routes into a routing table. You can control the routes
that a protocol places into each table and the routes from that table that the protocol advertises by
defining one or more routing policies and then applying them to the specific routing protocol.
The routing policy is responsible for selecting a route based on one of two user-selected routing
policies:
Port-based routing
Exchange-based routing
On the Brocade 300, 4100, 4900, 5000, 5410, 5424, 5450, 5460, 5470, 5480, 5100, 5300,
5424, 7500, 7500E, 7600, 7800 and 8000 switches, the Brocade 48000 director, and the
Brocade DCX and DCX-4S enterprise-class platforms (all 4 Gbps ASICs and later) routing is handled
by the FSPF protocol and either the port-based routing or exchange-based routing policies.
Each switch can have its own routing policy and different policies can exist in the same fabric.
ATTENTION
For most configurations, the default routing policy is optimal and provides the best performance.
You should change the routing policy only if there is a performance issue that is of concern, or if a
particular fabric configuration requires it.
Displaying the current routing policy
1.
Connect to the switch and log in as admin.
2.
Enter the
aptPolicy
command with no parameters.
The current policy is displayed, followed by the supported policies for the switch.
Example of the output from the aptPolicy command.
In the following example, the current policy is exchange-based routing (3) with the additional
AP dedicated link policy.
switch:admin>
aptpolicy
Current Policy: 3 1(ap)
3 0(ap): Default Policy
1: Port Based Routing Policy