A MAC pool is a collection of network identities, or MAC addresses, that are unique in their layer 2 environment and are available to be assigned to vNICs on a server. If you use MAC pools in service profiles, you do not have to manually configure the MAC addresses to be used by the server associated with the service profile.
In a system that implements multi-tenancy, you can use the organizational hierarchy to ensure that MAC pools can only be used by specific applications or business services. Cisco UCS Manager uses the name resolution policy to assign MAC addresses from the pool.
To assign a MAC address to a server, you must include the MAC pool in a vNIC policy. The vNIC policy is then included in the service profile assigned to that server.
You can specify your own MAC addresses or use a group of MAC addresses provided by Cisco.
Creating a MAC Pool
Procedure
Command or Action
Purpose
Step 1
UCS-A#
scope orgorg-name
Enters organization mode for the specified organization. To enter
the root organization mode, enter
/ as the
org-name.
Step 2
UCS-A /org #
create mac-poolmac-pool-name
Creates a MAC pool with the specified name, and enters
organization MAC pool mode.
This name can be between 1 and 32
alphanumeric characters. You cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and
you cannot change this name after the object has been saved.
Step 3
UCS-A /org/mac-pool #
set descrdescription
(Optional)
Provides a description for the MAC pool.
Note
If your description includes spaces, special characters, or
punctuation, you must begin and end your description with quotation marks. The
quotation marks will not appear in the description field of any
show command output.
Step 4
UCS-A /org/mac-pool # set assignmentorder {default | sequential}
This can be one of the following:
default—Cisco UCS Manager selects a random identity from the pool.
sequential—Cisco UCS Manager selects the lowest available identity from the pool.
Creates a block (range) of MAC addresses, and enters organization
MAC pool block mode. You must specify the first and last MAC addresses in the
address range using the form
nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn, with the addresses separated by a space.
Note
A MAC pool can contain more than one MAC address block. To
create multiple MAC address blocks, you must enter multiple
create block commands from organization MAC
pool mode.
Step 6
UCS-A /org/mac-pool #
commit-buffer
Commits the transaction to the system configuration.
The following example shows how to create a MAC pool named pool37, provide a
description for the pool, define a MAC address block by specifying the first
and last MAC addresses in the block, and commit the transaction:
UCS-A# scope org /
UCS-A /org # create mac-pool pool37
UCS-A /org/mac-pool* # set descr "This is my MAC pool"
UCS-A /org/mac-pool* # create block 00:A0:D7:42:00:01 00:A0:D7:42:01:00
UCS-A /org/mac-pool/block* # commit-buffer
UCS-A /org/mac-pool/block #
What to Do Next
Include the MAC pool in a vNIC template.
Deleting a MAC Pool
If you delete a pool, Cisco UCS Manager does not reallocate any addresses from that pool that have been assigned to vNICs or vHBAs. All assigned addresses from a deleted pool remain with the vNIC or vHBA to which they are assigned until one of the following occurs:
The associated service profiles are deleted.
The vNIC or vHBA to which the address is assigned is deleted.
The vNIC or vHBA is assigned to a different pool.
Procedure
Command or Action
Purpose
Step 1
UCS-A#
scope orgorg-name
Enters organization mode for the specified organization. To enter
the root organization mode, enter
/ as the
org-name.
Step 2
UCS-A /org # delete mac-poolpool-name
Deletes the specified MAC pool.
Step 3
UCS-A /org # commit-buffer
Commits the transaction to the system configuration.
The following example shows how to delete the MAC pool named pool4 and commit the transaction: