- Preface
- New and Changed Information for this Release
- Overview
- Configuring Cisco UCS Manager Accounts
- Configuring Fabric Interconnects and Ports
- Configuring Network Connections
- Configuring Storage Connections
- Configuring Cisco UCS Server Pools and Policies
- Configuring Service Profiles
- Managing Cisco UCS Servers
- Monitoring and Reporting
- Ports on the Cisco UCS 6100 Series Fabric Interconnect
- Port on the Cisco UCS 6200 Series Fabric Interconnect
- Enabling a Port
- Disabling a Port
- Configuring Ethernet Ports
- Unconfiguring an Ethernet Port
- Configuring Fibre Channel Ports
- Configuring Cisco UCS Mini Ports
- Cisco UCS Mini Scalability Ports
- Configuring a Scalability Port as a Server Port
- Configuring a Scalability Port as an Uplink Port
- Configuring a Scalability Port as an Uplink FCoE Port
- Configuring a Scalability Port as a Storage FCoE Port
- Configuring a Scalability Port as an Appliance Port
- Configuring a Fibre Channel Port as an FCoE Uplink Port
- Configuring a Fibre Channel Port as an FCoE Storage Port
Configuring Fabric Interconnects and Ports
This chapter contains the following sections:
Configuring the Fabric Interconnect Switching Mode
Ethernet Switching Mode
The Ethernet switching mode determines how the fabric interconnect behaves as a switching device between the servers and the network. The fabric interconnect operates in either of the following Ethernet switching modes:
End-Host Mode
End-host mode allows the fabric interconnect to act as an end host to the network, representing all servers (hosts) connected to it through vNICs. This behavior is achieved by pinning (either dynamically pinned or hard pinned) vNICs to uplink ports, which provides redundancy to the network, and makes the uplink ports appear as server ports to the rest of the fabric. In end-host mode, the fabric interconnect does not run the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) but it avoids loops by denying uplink ports from forwarding traffic to each other and by denying egress server traffic on more than one uplink port at a time. End-host mode is the default Ethernet switching mode and should be used if either of the following are used upstream:
![]() Note | When you enable end-host mode, if a vNIC is hard pinned to an uplink port and this uplink port goes down, the system cannot repin the vNIC, and the vNIC remains down. |
Switch Mode
Switch mode is the traditional Ethernet switching mode. The fabric interconnect runs STP to avoid loops, and broadcast and multicast packets are handled in the traditional way. Switch mode is not the default Ethernet switching mode, and should be used only if the fabric interconnect is directly connected to a router, or if either of the following are used upstream:
![]() Note | For both Ethernet switching modes, even when vNICs are hard pinned to uplink ports, all server-to-server unicast traffic in the server array is sent only through the fabric interconnect and is never sent through uplink ports. Server-to-server multicast and broadcast traffic is sent through all uplink ports in the same VLAN. |
Changing the Ethernet Switching Mode
![]() Note | When you change the Ethernet switching mode, Cisco UCS Director issues a request to Cisco UCS Manager to restart the fabric interconnect. For a cluster configuration, Cisco UCS Director issues a request to restart both fabric interconnects sequentially. The second fabric interconnect can take several minutes to complete the change in Ethernet switching mode and become system-ready. The configuration is retained. |
Fibre Channel Switching Mode
The Fibre Channel switching mode determines how the fabric interconnect behaves as a switching device between the servers and storage devices. The fabric interconnect operates in either of the following Fibre Channel switching modes:
End-Host Mode
End-host mode allows the fabric interconnect to act as an end host to the connected fibre channel networks, representing all servers (hosts) connected to it through virtual host bus adapters (vHBAs). This behavior is achieved by pinning (either dynamically pinned or hard pinned) vHBAs to Fibre Channel uplink ports, which makes the Fibre Channel ports appear as server ports (N-ports) to the rest of the fabric. When in end-host mode, the fabric interconnect avoids loops by denying uplink ports from receiving traffic from one another.
End-host mode is synonymous with N Port Virtualization (NPV) mode. This mode is the default Fibre Channel Switching mode.
![]() Note | When you enable end-host mode, if a vHBA is hard pinned to an uplink Fibre Channel port and this uplink port goes down, the system cannot repin the vHBA, and the vHBA remains down. |
Switch Mode
Switch mode is the traditional Fibre Channel switching mode. Switch mode allows the fabric interconnect to connect directly to a storage device. Enabling Fibre Channel switch mode is useful in Pod models where there is no SAN (for example, a single Cisco UCS domain that is connected directly to storage), or where a SAN exists (with an upstream MDS).
Switch mode is not the default Fibre Channel switching mode.
![]() Note | In Fibre Channel switch mode, SAN pin groups are irrelevant. Any existing SAN pin groups are ignored. |
Changing Fibre Channel Switching Mode
![]() Note | When you change the Fibre Channel switching mode, Cisco UCS Director issues a request to Cisco UCS Manager to restart the fabric interconnect. For a cluster configuration, Cisco UCS Director issues a request to restart both fabric interconnects sequentially. The second fabric interconnect can take several minutes to complete the change in Fibre Channel switching mode and become system-ready. The configuration is retained. |
Configuring Ports
Ports on the Cisco UCS 6100 Series Fabric Interconnect
Each Cisco UCS 6100 series fabric interconnect has a set of ports in a fixed port module that you can configure as either server ports or uplink Ethernet ports. These ports are not reserved. They cannot be used by a Cisco UCS domain until you configure them. You can add expansion modules to increase the number of uplink ports on the fabric interconnect or to add uplink Fibre Channel ports to the fabric interconnect.
Create LAN pin groups and SAN pin groups to pin traffic from servers to an uplink port.
![]() Note | Ports on the Cisco UCS 6100 series fabric interconnect are not unified. For more information on Unified Ports, see Port Modes. |
Each fabric interconnect can include the following port types:
- Server Ports
-
Server ports handle data traffic between the fabric interconnect and the adapter cards on the servers.
You can only configure server ports on the fixed port module. Expansion modules do not include server ports.
- Uplink Ethernet Ports
-
Uplink Ethernet ports handle Ethernet traffic between the fabric interconnect and the next layer of the network. All network-bound Ethernet traffic is pinned to one of these ports.
By default, Ethernet ports are unconfigured. However, you can configure them to function in the following ways: You can configure uplink Ethernet ports on either the fixed module or an expansion module.
- Uplink Fibre Channel Ports
-
Uplink Fibre Channel ports handle FCoE traffic between the fabric interconnect and the next layer of the storage area network. All network-bound FCoE traffic is pinned to one of these ports.
By default, Fibre Channel ports are uplink. However, you can configure them to function as Fibre Channel storage ports. This is useful in cases where Cisco UCS requires a connection to a Direct-Attached Storage (DAS) device.
You can only configure uplink Fibre Channel ports on an expansion module. The fixed module does not include uplink Fibre Channel ports.
Port on the Cisco UCS 6200 Series Fabric Interconnect
Port Modes
For Cisco UCS 6200 series fabric interconnects, configure the port mode for the ports. The port mode determines whether a unified port on the fabric interconnect is configured to carry Ethernet or Fibre Channel traffic. The port mode is not automatically discovered by the fabric interconnect.
Changing the port mode results in the existing port configuration being deleted and replaced by a new logical port. Any objects associated with that port configuration, such as VLANs and VSANs, are removed. There is no restriction on the number of times that the port mode can be changed for a unified port.
Port Types
The port type defines the type of traffic carried over a unified port connection.
All of the port types listed are configurable on both the fixed and expansion module, including server ports, which are not configurable on the Cisco UCS 6100 series fabric interconnect expansion module, but are configurable on the Cisco UCS 6200 series fabric interconnect expansion module.
By default, unified ports changed to Ethernet port mode are set to the uplink Ethernet port type. Unified ports changed to Fibre Channel port mode are set to the Fibre Channel uplink port type. Fibre Channel ports cannot be unconfigured.
Changing the port type does not require a reboot.
When the port mode is set to Ethernet, you can configure the following port types:
-
Server ports
-
Ethernet uplink ports
-
Ethernet port channel members
-
FCoE ports
-
Appliance ports
-
Appliance port channel members
When the port mode is set to Fibre Channel, you can configure the following port types:
Configuring the Port Mode for Fixed Module Ports
![]() Note | The fabric interconnect will be rebooted after you configure the port mode. |
You cannot configure the port mode for ports on a Cisco UCS 6100 series fabric interconnect.
Configuring the Port Mode for Expansion Module Ports
![]() Note | The fabric interconnect will be rebooted after you configure the port mode. |
You cannot configure the port mode for ports on a 6100 series fabric interconnect.
Enabling a Port
Disabling a Port
Configuring Ethernet Ports
Configuring a Server Port
Configuring an Uplink Port
Configuring an FCoE Uplink Port
Configuring an FCoE Storage Port
Configuring an Appliance Port
Unconfiguring an Ethernet Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to unconfigure a port. |
| Step 5 | Click Ethernet Ports. |
| Step 6 | Click the port that you want to unconfigure You can Ctrl-Click to choose and unconfigure multiple ports. |
| Step 7 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Unconfigure. |
| Step 8 | On the Unconfigure screen, click Submit. |
Configuring Fibre Channel Ports
Configuring a Fibre Channel Storage Port
The Fibre Channel switching mode must be set to switch mode for these ports to be valid. The storage ports cannot function in end-host mode.
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure a Fibre Channel storage port. |
| Step 5 | Click Fibre Channel Ports. |
| Step 6 | Click the port that you want to configure as a Fibre Channel storage port. You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 7 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Storage Port. |
| Step 8 | On the Configure as FC Storage Uplink Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring a Fibre Channel Uplink Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure a Fibre Channel uplink port. |
| Step 5 | Click the Fibre Channel Ports tab. |
| Step 6 | Click the port that you want to configure as a Fibre Channel uplink port. You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 7 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Uplink Port. |
| Step 8 | On the Configure as Uplink Port screen, click Submit. |
Associating a Fibre Channel Port with a VSAN
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to associate with a VSAN. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Fibre Channel Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the port
that you want to associate with a VSAN.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and associate multiple ports with the same VSAN. |
| Step 8 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Associate VSAN. |
| Step 9 | On the Associate VSAN screen, choose a VSAN from the VSAN drop-down list and click Associate. |
Configuring Cisco UCS Mini Ports
Cisco UCS Mini Scalability Ports
The Cisco UCS 6324 Fabric Interconnect contains a scalability port as well as four unified ports. The scalability port is a 40GB QSFP+ breakout port that, with proper cabling, can support four 1G or 10G SFP+ ports. A scalability port can be used as a licensed server port for supported Cisco UCS rack servers, as an appliance port, or as an FCoE port.
Configuring a Scalability Port as a Server Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure a server port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Scalability Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in
the table for the port that you want to configure as a server port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Server Port. |
| Step 9 | In the Configure as Server Port dialog box, click Submit. |
Configuring a Scalability Port as an Uplink Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure an uplink port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Scalability Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in
the table for the port that you want to configure as an uplink port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From the More Actions, drop-down meu, choose Configure as Uplink Port. |
| Step 9 | On the Configure as Uplink Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring a Scalability Port as an Uplink FCoE Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure an uplink FCoE port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Scalability Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in
the table for the port that you want to configure as an uplink FCoE port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Uplink FCoE Port. |
| Step 9 | On the Configure as Uplink FCoE Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring a Scalability Port as a Storage FCoE Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure a storage FCoE port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Scalability Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in the table for the port that you want to configure
as a storage FCoE port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Storage FCoE Port. |
| Step 9 | On the Configure as Storage FCoE Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring a Scalability Port as an Appliance Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure an appliance port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Scalability Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in the table for the port that you want to configure
as an appliance port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Appliance Port. |
| Step 9 | On the Configure as Appliance Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring a Fibre Channel Port as an FCoE Uplink Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure an FC uplink port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Fibre Channel Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in the table for the port that you want to configure
as an FC uplink port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Uplink FCoE. |
| Step 9 | On the Configure as FCoE Uplink Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring a Fibre Channel Port as an FCoE Storage Port
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click Fabric Interconnects. |
| Step 4 | Click the row in the table for the fabric interconnect for which you want to configure an FC storage port. |
| Step 5 | Click View Details. |
| Step 6 | Click Fibre Channel Ports. |
| Step 7 | Click the row in the table for the port that you want to configure
as an FC storage port.
You can Ctrl-Click to choose and configure multiple ports. |
| Step 8 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, choose Configure as Storage FCoE. |
| Step 9 | On the Configure as FCoE Storage Port screen, click Submit. |
Configuring Port Channels
LAN Port Channel
A LAN port channel allows you to group several physical uplink Ethernet ports (link aggregation) to create one logical Ethernet link to provide fault-tolerance and high-speed connectivity. You can add up to eight uplink Ethernet ports to a port channel.
![]() Note | Cisco UCS uses Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP), not Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP), to group the uplink Ethernet ports into a port channel. If the ports on the upstream switch are not configured for LACP, the fabric interconnects treat all ports in an uplink Ethernet port channel as individual ports and forward the packets. |
Creating a LAN Port Channel
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click LAN Port Channels. |
| Step 4 | Click Add. |
| Step 5 | On the LAN Port Channel screen, choose LAN Port Channel from the Port Channel Type drop-down list and click Next. |
| Step 6 | On the
LAN Port
Channel - Details page, do the following:
|
| Step 7 | On the
Summary page, review the details of the port channel
that you have created and click
Submit to create the port channel.
If you want to change some of the details, click Back and return to that page. |
SAN Port Channel
A SAN port channel allows you to group several physical Fibre Channel ports (link aggregation) to create one logical Fibre Channel link to provide fault-tolerance and high-speed connectivity. You can create up to four SAN port channels in each Cisco UCS domain. Each Fibre Channel port channel can include a maximum of 16 uplink Fibre Channel ports.
Creating a SAN Port Channel
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click the SAN Port Channels. |
| Step 4 | Click Add. |
| Step 5 | On the SAN Port Channel screen, choose SAN Port Channel from the Port Channel Type drop-down list and click Next. |
| Step 6 | On the
SAN Port
Channel - Details page, do the following:
|
| Step 7 | On the
Summary page, review the details of the port channel
that you have created and click
Submit to create the port channel.
If you want to change some of the details, click Back and return to that page. |
Appliance Port Channel
An appliance port channel allows you to group several physical appliance ports to create one logical Ethernet storage link for providing fault-tolerance and high-speed connectivity. You can add up to eight appliance ports to a port channel.
Creating an Appliance Port Channel
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click the LAN Port Channels. |
| Step 4 | Click Add. |
| Step 5 | On the LAN Port Channel screen, choose Appliance Port Channel from the Port Channel Type drop-down list and click Next. |
| Step 6 | On the
Appliance Port Channel - Details page, do the
following:
|
| Step 7 | On the
Summary page, review the details of the port channel
that you have created and click
Submit to create the port channel.
If you want to change some of the details, click Back and return to that page. |
FCoE Port Channel
A Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) port channel allows you to group several physical FCoE ports to create one logical FCoE port channel. At a physical level, the FCoE port channel carries FCoE traffic over an Ethernet port channel. An FCoE port channel with a set of members is essentially an Ethernet port channel with the same members. This Ethernet port channel is used as a physical transport for FCoE traffic.
For each FCoE port channel, Cisco UCS creates a Virtual Fibre Channel (VFC) internally and binds it to an Ethernet port channel. FCoE traffic received from the hosts is sent over the VFC the same way as the FCoE traffic is sent over Fibre Channel uplinks.
Creating an FCoE Port Channel
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click the SAN Port Channels. |
| Step 4 | Click Add. |
| Step 5 | On the SAN Port Channel screen, choose FCoE Port Channel from the Port Channel Type drop-down list and click Next. |
| Step 6 | On the FCoE Port Channel - Details page, do the following: |
| Step 7 | On the Summary page, review the details of the port channel that you have just created and click Submit to create the port channel. If you want to change some of the details, click Back and return to that page. |
Enabling a Port Channel
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click one of the following: |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the port channel that you want to enable. |
| Step 5 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, chooseEnable Port Channel. |
| Step 6 | On the Enable Port Channel screen, click Enable. |
Disabling a Port Channel
| Step 1 | Choose . |
| Step 2 | On Compute page, choose the pod that includes the Cisco UCS Manager account. |
| Step 3 | Click one of the following: |
| Step 4 | Click the row for the port channel that you want to disable. |
| Step 5 | From the More Actions drop-down menu, chooseDisable Port Channel. |
| Step 6 | on the Disable Port Channel screen, click Disable. |

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