Cisco Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP Weißbuch

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Design Guide 
 
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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP 
This section briefly describes the Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP and explains how the 
blade servers within the HP c-Class BladeSystem are physically connected to the switching 
modules. 
The Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 provides enhanced Layer 2 services (known as Layer 2+ or 
Intelligent Ethernet switching) to the HP c-Class BladeSystem. The Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 
3020 enhances basic Layer 2 switching by including Cisco proprietary protocols, access control 
lists (ACLs), and quality of service (QoS) based on Layer 3 information. With Simple Network 
Management Protocol (SNMP), command-line interface (CLI), or HTTP management options 
available and a robust set of Cisco IOS
®
 Software switching features, the Cisco Catalyst Blade 
Switch 3020 naturally integrates into the data center environment. The following features highlight 
this capacity: 
● 
Loop protection and rapid convergence with support for Per VLAN Spanning Tree Plus 
(PVST+), IEEE 802.1w, IEEE 802.1s, Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BDPU) Guard, Loop 
Guard, PortFast, UplinkFast, and Unidirectional Link Detection (UDLD) 
● 
Advanced management protocols, including Cisco Discovery Protocol, VLAN Trunking 
Protocol (VTP), and Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP)  
● 
Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP) and Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) for link 
load balancing and high availability  
● 
Support for authentication services, including RADIUS and TACACS+ client support 
● 
Support for protection mechanisms, such as limiting the number of MAC addresses allowed 
or shutting down the port in response to security violations 
Each Ethernet switch provides eight external Ethernet ports for connecting the blade enclosure to 
the external network. Four Small Form-Factor Pluggable (SFP) ports provide 1000BASE-SX 
interfaces and are shared with four of the copper Gigabit Ethernet links. Two additional copper 
Gigabit Ethernet ports are shared with two internal crossover interfaces connecting the pair of 
switches (labeled X-Crossovers in Figures 2 and 3). All of these ports can be grouped to support 
the IEEE 802.3ad LACP. Each blade server is connected to the backplane using the available 
Gigabit Ethernet network interface cards (NICs). The number of NICs on each blade server varies. 
Each server, whether it is full- or half-height, supports an additional Ethernet interface providing 
Integrated Lights Out (iLO) support.  
Note:   The iLO interface supports a management interface that resides on each server blade. For 
more information about the iLO system, refer to the “Management” section of this guide.