HP StorageWorks 4000/6000/8000 .HP StorageWorks SAN Design Reference Guide, Pa - Page 427
Independent fabric merge, High-availability redundant fabric merge, example
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Independent fabric merge Merge fabrics by disabling the effective configuration on one fabric and then connecting both fabrics. After you connect the fabrics, devices in the second fabric are not accessible until you add them to the effective configuration. CAUTION: When you disable the effective configuration, the fabric becomes accessible to all servers. To merge two fabrics without disabling the effective configuration for entire fabrics, disable at least one switch in each fabric or use an additional switch. Use the disabled switch to merge the fabrics and create the new configuration. High-availability redundant fabric merge With redundant fabrics, you can merge a fabric by taking it offline and redirecting I/O to the other fabric. Current I/O operations are not affected; however, during the merge, the hosts operate in degraded mode without redundant data path protection. With proper planning, you can minimize downtime. After completing and verifying the fabric merge, bring the first fabric online by restoring the I/O paths. After you restore the I/O paths on the first fabric, you can repeat the merge process for the second fabric. Merging high-availability fabrics example In the following procedure, the SAN consists of fabric A and a redundant fabric B. Each of these fabrics is merged with a SAN consisting of fabrics C and D. 1. Identify and resolve any issues that can cause fabric segmentation. 2. Verify that each fabric provides a redundant path to all attached devices. 3. Verify that paths are open to each device that must remain online during the merge. 4. Select fabrics for merging, for example, fabric A with fabric C. 5. Close all active paths on the fabric selected for merging and prepare devices for downtime. For example, use multipathing software to redirect I/O by performing a failover to the alternate path. 6. Verify that the fabric selected for merging has no I/O activity. 7. Connect the selected fabrics (fabric A and fabric C). 8. Verify that the newly merged fabric contains all switches and that the zoning has merged correctly. 9. Restore I/O operations on the new fabric from the multipathing software console. 10. Verify that paths are open and restored for each device. 11. Ensure that all paths and I/O operations have been restored. Repeat this procedure to merge fabric B with fabric D. SAN Design Reference Guide 427