Cisco Catalyst Center Third-Generation Appliance Installation Guide, Release 3.1.x

PDF

NIC bonding overview

Want to summarize with AI?

Log in

Overview

Provides an overview of the network interface controller bonding feature.

On any given Catalyst Center appliance, you can configure the Enterprise, Intracluster, Management, and Internet interfaces. If you enable network interface controller (NIC) bonding on an appliance, each of the interfaces has two instances. The primary instance (located on either your appliance's motherboard or Intel E810-XXVDA2 network adapter) is connected to one switch. The secondary instance (located on your appliance's Intel E810-XXVDA4 network adapter) is connected to a different switch. NIC bonding consolidates the two instances of each interface into a single logical interface. It appears as a single device with one MAC address. Enabling this feature provides benefits that depend on the bonding mode you select when configuring your appliance's interfaces. Benefits include:

Note

Both single-node and three-node Catalyst Center clusters support NIC bonding.

  • Active-Backup mode: By default, this is the bonding mode that's configured for your appliance's interfaces when this feature is enabled on your appliance. It enables high availability (HA) for the two interfaces that Catalyst Center has grouped together. When the interface that's currently active goes down, the other interface takes its place and becomes active.

    Note

    When this mode is enabled on an interface that supports both 1-Gbps and 10-Gbps throughput, Catalyst Center automatically sets the throughput to 1-Gbps.

  • LACP mode: When selected, the two interfaces that Catalyst Center has grouped together share the same speed and duplex settings. This provides load balancing and higher bandwidth for the interfaces. In order to enable this mode, these items must first be in place:

    • Ensure the Linux utility tool supports the base drivers that are used to retrieve the speed and duplex mode of each interface.

    • Ensure the switch that is connected to the Enterprise port supports dynamic interface aggregation.

    • Ensure that after you enable LACP on the switch:

      • The LACP mode is set to active. This setting places the switch port connected to your appliance into an active negotiating state, in which the port initiates negotiations with remote ports by sending LACP packets

    • The LACP rate is set to fast. This setting changes the rate at which the LACP control packets are sent to an LACP-supported interface from the default every 30 seconds to once every second.

    Note
    • You can only enable LACP mode on your appliance's Enterprise and Intracluster interfaces. The Management and Internet Access interfaces only support Active-Backup mode.

    • You can only enable LACP mode on your appliance's Intracluster interface during the initial configuration of your appliance.

Before you use NIC bonding in your production environment, do these tasks:


Appliance support

All third-generation Catalyst Center appliances support NIC bonding:

  • 32-core appliance: Cisco part number DN3-HW-APL

  • 56-core appliance: Cisco part number DN3-HW-APL-L

  • 80-core appliance: Cisco part number DN3-HW-APL-XL