McDATA 4314 Manual De Usuario

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Planning
2-7
Multiple Chassis Fabrics
Domain ID, Principal Priority, and Domain ID Lock
The following switch configuration settings affect multiple chassis fabrics:
Domain  ID
Principal priority
Domain  ID  lock
The domain ID is a unique number from 1–239 that identifies each switch in a 
fabric. The principal priority is a number (1–255) that determines the 
principal switch which manages domain ID assignments for the fabric. The 
switch with the highest principal priority (1 is high, 255 is low) becomes the 
principal switch. If the principal priority is the same for all switches in a 
fabric, the switch with the lowest WWN becomes the principal switch.
The domain ID lock allows (False) or prevents (True) the reassignment of the 
domain ID on that switch. Switches come from the factory with the domain 
ID set to 1, the domain ID lock set to False, and the principal priority set to 
254. Refer to the EFCM Basic Management Guide for information about 
changing the domain ID and domain ID lock using EFCM BASIC. Refer to the 
Set Config command in the McDATA 4314 Command Line Interface Guide for 
information about changing the default domain ID, domain ID lock, and 
principal priority parameters.
An unresolved domain ID conflict means that the switch with the higher 
WWN will isolate as a separate fabric, and the Logged-In LEDs on both 
switches will flash green to show the affected ports. If you connect a new 
switch to an existing fabric with its domain ID unlocked, and a domain ID 
conflict occurs, the new switch will isolate as a separate fabric. However, you 
can remedy this by resetting the new switch or taking it offline then back 
online. The principal switch will reassign the domain ID and the switch will 
join the fabric.
NOTE:   
Domain ID reassignment is not reflected in zoning that is defined by domain 
ID/port number pair or Fibre Channel address. You must reconfigure zones that are 
affected by domain ID reassignment. To prevent zoning definitions from becoming 
invalid under these conditions, lock the domain IDs using EFCM BASIC or the Set 
Config Switch command.