HP StorageWorks 2/24 FW 07.00.00/HAFM SW 08.06.00 McDATA Products in a SAN Env - Page 212

Extended-Distance Ports, High-Availability Considerations, Fibre Channel Cables and Connectors

Page 212 highlights

Physical Planning Considerations 5 Extended-Distance Ports Through longwave laser transceivers and repeaters or wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) equipment, directors and fabric switches (but not Sphereon 4300 or 4500 Switches) support Fibre Channel data transmission distances of over 100 km. The extended distance feature is enabled on a port-by-port basis by using entries in the RX BB Credit column for a specified port at the Element Manager application's Configure Ports dialog box. This feature provides extended distance support using Fibre Channel protocol. Refer to Distance Extension Through BB_Credit for additional information. When a director or fabric switch port is configured to support extended link distances, the attached device (or attached fabric element) must also support extended distance operation and be configured to use a higher BB_Credit value to maintain link efficiency. If the extended distance feature is enabled for a port that is not installed or does not support extended distance operation, the configuration for the feature is ignored. High-Availability Considerations To provide high device availability, critical servers, storage devices, or applications should be connected to more than one fabric element (director or switch) or to more than one fabric. To determine if dual-connection capability exists for a device, refer to the associated device documentation. To provide high fabric availability, consider the use of multiple fabric elements (directors and switches), multiple ISLs, or redundant fabrics. Refer to Fabric Availability for information. Plan to maintain unused (spare) director and switch ports if port connections must be quickly moved and re-established after a failure. If an individual port or an entire port card fails, optical transceivers or port cards can be removed and replaced, spare port connections identified (through the Element Manager application), and fiber-optic cables rerouted and reconnected while the director or switch is operational. Fibre Channel Cables and Connectors This section provides Fibre Channel cable and connector planning information as follows: • Cables for directors, fabric switches, and SAN routers. • Intrepid-series director, Sphereon-series fabric switch, and Eclipse-series SAN router optical connectors. 5-6 McDATA Products in a SAN Environment - Planning Manual

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5
5-6
McDATA Products in a SAN Environment - Planning Manual
Physical Planning Considerations
Extended-Distance
Ports
Through longwave laser transceivers and repeaters or wavelength
division multiplexing (WDM) equipment, directors and fabric
switches (but not Sphereon 4300 or 4500 Switches) support Fibre
Channel data transmission distances of over 100 km. The extended
distance feature is enabled on a port-by-port basis by using entries in
the
RX BB Credit
column for a specified port at the Element Manager
application’s
Configure Ports
dialog box. This feature provides
extended distance support using Fibre Channel protocol. Refer to
Distance Extension Through BB_Credit
for additional information.
When a director or fabric switch port is configured to support
extended link distances, the attached device (or attached fabric
element) must also support extended distance operation and be
configured to use a higher BB_Credit value to maintain link
efficiency. If the extended distance feature is enabled for a port that is
not installed or does not support extended distance operation, the
configuration for the feature is ignored.
High-Availability
Considerations
To provide high device availability, critical servers, storage devices,
or applications should be connected to more than one fabric element
(director or switch) or to more than one fabric. To determine if
dual-connection capability exists for a device, refer to the associated
device documentation. To provide high fabric availability, consider
the use of multiple fabric elements (directors and switches), multiple
ISLs, or redundant fabrics. Refer to
Fabric Availability
for information.
Plan to maintain unused (spare) director and switch ports if port
connections must be quickly moved and re-established after a failure.
If an individual port or an entire port card fails, optical transceivers
or port cards can be removed and replaced, spare port connections
identified (through the Element Manager application), and fiber-optic
cables rerouted and reconnected while the director or switch is
operational.
Fibre Channel
Cables and
Connectors
This section provides Fibre Channel cable and connector planning
information as follows:
Cables for directors, fabric switches, and SAN routers.
Intrepid-series director, Sphereon-series fabric switch, and
Eclipse-series SAN router optical connectors.