HP StorageWorks 1606 HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 6.3.0c Release Notes (5697-0361 - Page 33
ICLs, Extended Fabrics and R_RDY flow control, Implementation
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check the port status helps prevent false positives and unnecessarily fencing a port (for example, during a server reboot). • When using Port Fencing, you must first run the fwalarmsfilterset command. This command enables the port and allows you to receive Port Fencing messages. • The state-changes counter used by Fabric Watch in Fabric OS 6.3 has been updated to ignore any toggling of F_Ports due to planned internal mechanisms, such as throttling and trunking. There are some Fabric OS CLI commands, such as portcfgspeed and portCfgTrunkPort, that implicitly disable/enable ports after configuration. • Fabric Watch monitors state change for LISL ports, even though it is not displayed in Fabric Watch CLI commands. • The Port Fencing feature is not supported for Loss of Sync (LOS) and Link Failure (LF) areas of Port/F-Port/E-Port classes. State change area can be used in place of LOS/LF areas for Port Fencing. ICLs • If a DC SAN Director with an 8-link ICL license is connected to a DC SAN Director with a 16-link license, the DC SAN Director with the 16-link license will report enc_out errors. The errors are harmless, but will continue to increment. These errors will not be reported if a DC SAN Director with a 16-link license is connected to a DC04 SAN Director with only 8-link ICL ports. • If ICL ports are disabled on only one side of an ICL link, the enabled side may see enc_out errors. Extended Fabrics and R_RDY flow control • Starting with Fabric OS 5.1, the Extended Fabrics feature is supported with R_RDY flow control. (R_RDY flow control mode can be enabled using the portCfgISLMode command.) R_RDY flow control mode that uses IDLE primitives does not support frame-based trunking for devices such as Time Division Multiplexor (TDM). To overcome this limitation and provide support for frame-based trunking with Extended Fabrics, Fabric OS 6.2.x and later has been enhanced to support interoperability with these distance extension devices. Fabric OS 6.3.0 and later allows Extended Fabrics E_Ports to operate in VC_RDY mode using either ARB or IDLE primitives as fill words. This allows frame-based trunking to be supported on Extended Fabrics E_Ports even when IDLE primitives are configured for these ports when operating in native VC_RDY mode. Prior to this change, frame-based trunking was supported only when ARB primitives were used in VC_RDY mode. With Fabric OS 6.2.x, frame-based trunking is supported on Extended Fabrics E_Ports even if IDLE or ARB primitives are used when operating in native VC_RDY mode. Implementation The portcfglongdistance CLI parameter VC Translation Link Init is now overloaded to specify whether the long-distance link should use IDLE or ARB primitives. By default vc_init is enabled. When vc_init is enabled, the long-distance link uses ARB primitives. When vc_init is disabled, the link uses IDLE primitives. The buffer-to-buffer credit recovery feature is not supported on Extended Fabrics E_Port when it is configured to use IDLE primitives. The user must disable the buffer-to-buffer credit recovery feature using the portcfgcreditrecovery command and specifying the disable option; otherwise, the link will continuously reset. The Adaptive Networking SID/DID Traffic Prioritization QoS feature is not supported on Extended Fabrics E_Ports when IDLE primitives are configured on these ports. In this mode, only data virtual channels are available when QoS-related virtual channels are not available. HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 6.3.0c Release Notes 33