Dell Brocade G620 Brocade 8.0.1 Fabric OS Administratiors Guide - Page 501

Identifying and deleting stale xlate domains, Domain ID range for front and translate phantom domains

Page 501 highlights

Using FC-FC Routing to Connect Fabrics All EX_Ports or VEX_Ports connected to an edge fabric use the same xlate domain ID for an imported edge fabric; this value persists across switch reboots and fabric reconfigurations. If you lose connectivity to the edge fabric because of link failures or the IFL being disabled, xlate domains remain visible. This prevents unnecessary fabric disruptions caused by xlate domains repeatedly going offline and online due to corresponding IFL failures. To remove the xlate domain from the backbone, refer to Identifying and deleting stale xlate domains on page 501. The combination of front domains and xlate domains allows routing around path failures, including path failures through the routers. The multiple paths to an xlate domain provide additional bandwidth and redundancy. There are some differences in how the xlate domain is presented in the backbone fabric. The backbone xlate domains are topologically connected to FC routers and participate in FC-FC routing protocol in the backbone fabric. Front domains are not needed in the backbone fabric. As in the case of an xlate domain in an edge fabric, backbone fabric xlate domains provide additional bandwidth and redundancy by being able to present themselves as connected to single or multiple FC routers with each FC router capable of connecting multiple IFLs to edge fabrics. Use the fcrXlateConfig command to display or assign a preferred domain ID to a translate domain or, in some scenarios, to prevent the creation of an unnecessary xlate domain. Identifying and deleting stale xlate domains If a remote edge fabric goes unreachable, the xlate domains created in other edge fabrics for this remote edge fabric are retained and not removed unless there is any disruption in the local edge fabric or unless you remove them manually. You can use the fcrXlateConfig command to identify and remove these stale xlate domains without disrupting the fabric. 1. Connect to the FC router and log in using an account with admin permissions. 2. Enter the fcrXlateConfig --show command to identify any stale xlate domains. 3. Enter the fcrXlateConfig --del command to delete the stale xlate domains. sw0:root> fcrxlateconfig --show stalexd Imported FID Stale XD Owner Domain 012 002 007 ( this FCR ) sw0:root> fcrxlateconfig --del stalexd 12 2 Xlate domain 2 is deleted Domain ID range for front and translate phantom domains In the releases prior to Fabric OS 7.4.0, the following domain IDs were assigned: ∙ The FC router front domain is assigned 160 as the domain ID if the insistent domain ID is not configured using the portCfgExport command. ∙ The FC router translate domain is assigned 1 as the domain ID for importing proxies to the edge fabric if the insistent domain ID is not configured using the fcrXlateConfig command. Starting with Fabric OS 7.4.0, to avoid FC router phantom domains taking over the real switch domain ID, the principal switch assigns the domain ID based on the following rules: ∙ The front domain ID for an FC router is assigned within the range 160 through 199. ∙ The translate domain ID for an FC router is assigned within the range 200 through 239 ∙ If the preferred domain ID is not configured on an FC router for front or translate domain, the FC router requests 160 for the front domain and 200 for the translate domain. If the preferred domain ID is configured on the FC router for either the front or translate domain, the FC router will still request for the front domain ID of 160 and the translate domain ID of 200 at the discretion of the principal switch in the edge fabric. Depending on whether there are any domain ID conflicts in the fabric, Brocade Fabric OS Administration Guide, 8.0.1 53-1004111-02 501

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All EX_Ports or VEX_Ports connected to an edge fabric use the same xlate domain ID for an imported edge fabric; this value persists
across switch reboots and fabric reconfigurations.
If you lose connectivity to the edge fabric because of link failures or the IFL being disabled, xlate domains remain visible. This prevents
unnecessary fabric disruptions caused by xlate domains repeatedly going offline and online due to corresponding IFL failures. To
remove the xlate domain from the backbone, refer to
Identifying and deleting stale xlate domains
on page 501.
The combination of front domains and xlate domains allows routing around path failures, including path failures through the routers. The
multiple paths to an xlate domain provide additional bandwidth and redundancy.
There are some differences in how the xlate domain is presented in the backbone fabric. The backbone xlate domains are topologically
connected to FC routers and participate in FC-FC routing protocol in the backbone fabric. Front domains are not needed in the
backbone fabric. As in the case of an xlate domain in an edge fabric, backbone fabric xlate domains provide additional bandwidth and
redundancy by being able to present themselves as connected to single or multiple FC routers with each FC router capable of
connecting multiple IFLs to edge fabrics.
Use the
fcrXlateConfig
command to display or assign a preferred domain ID to a translate domain or, in some scenarios, to prevent the
creation of an unnecessary xlate domain.
Identifying and deleting stale xlate domains
If a remote edge fabric goes unreachable, the xlate domains created in other edge fabrics for this remote edge fabric are retained and
not removed unless there is any disruption in the local edge fabric or unless you remove them manually.
You can use the
fcrXlateConfig
command to identify and remove these stale xlate domains without disrupting the fabric.
1.
Connect to the FC router and log in using an account with admin permissions.
2.
Enter the
fcrXlateConfig --show
command to identify any stale xlate domains.
3.
Enter the
fcrXlateConfig --del
command to delete the stale xlate domains.
sw0:root> fcrxlateconfig --show stalexd
Imported FID
Stale XD
Owner Domain
--------------------------------------------------
012
002
007 ( this FCR )
sw0:root> fcrxlateconfig --del stalexd 12 2
Xlate domain 2 is deleted
Domain ID range for front and translate phantom domains
In the releases prior to Fabric OS 7.4.0, the following domain IDs were assigned:
The FC router front domain is assigned 160 as the domain ID if the insistent domain ID is not configured using the
portCfgExport
command.
The FC router translate domain is assigned 1 as the domain ID for importing proxies to the edge fabric if the insistent domain ID
is not configured using the
fcrXlateConfig
command.
Starting with Fabric OS 7.4.0, to avoid FC router phantom domains taking over the real switch domain ID, the principal switch assigns the
domain ID based on the following rules:
The front domain ID for an FC router is assigned within the range 160 through 199.
The translate domain ID for an FC router is assigned within the range 200 through 239
If the preferred domain ID is not configured on an FC router for front or translate domain, the FC router requests 160 for the
front domain and 200 for the translate domain. If the preferred domain ID is configured on the FC router for either the front or
translate domain, the FC router will still request for the front domain ID of 160 and the translate domain ID of 200 at the
discretion of the principal switch in the edge fabric. Depending on whether there are any domain ID conflicts in the fabric,
Using FC-FC Routing to Connect Fabrics
Brocade Fabric OS Administration Guide, 8.0.1
53-1004111-02
501