Q-Logic 8200 Manual Do Utilizador

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2–Configuring NIC
NIC Partitioning (NPAR)
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NPAR QoS allows NIC partitions to each allocate a minimum guaranteed portion 
of the available bandwidth. QoS bandwidth only applies only to NIC partitions. 
iSCSI partitions are not supported by the QoS bandwidth allocation. This brings 
up the possibility that, if the total minimum allocated bandwidth across the NIC 
partitions equals 100 percent, then the iSCSI partition will be limited to 1 percent 
of the NIC bandwidth portion in high-utilization conditions.
To ensure that iSCSI has more than 1 percent of bandwidth available in 
high-utilization conditions, set the total NPAR QoS minimum bandwidth settings 
so that they equal less than 100 percent. 
Example
An NPAR enabled port has two NIC partitions, one iSCSI partition, and one 
FCoE partition. 
ETS allocates 50 percent of the network bandwidth to FCoE traffic and 
50 percent to non-FCoE traffic.
The NPAR QoS minimum bandwidth setting for each NIC partition is 
50 percent.
This setting means that each NIC partition is guaranteed 50 percent of 
50 percent of 10Gb, or 2.5Gb each.
If at any time the FCoE partition is using 5Gb of bandwidth and each NIC 
partition is using 2.5Gb, then the iSCSI partition is left with only 50Mb of 
bandwidth.
If, however, the NIC partitions each allocated 45 percent of the non-FCoE 
traffic, then the total allocated bandwidth would be 90 percent.
The remaining 10 percent (or 500 Mb) would then be effectively 
reserved for the iSCSi partition.
eSwitch
The 8200 and 3200 Series Adapters support embedded switch (eSwitch) 
functionality, which provides a basic VLAN-aware Layer-2 switch for Ethernet 
frames. Each physical port has one instance of an eSwitch, which supports all 
NPARs on that physical port. 
The eSwitch operation is transparent and the administrator does not need to 
perform any specific configuration. The ability to view eSwitch statistics depends 
on your operating environment and management tool.
The QLogic drivers download the VM MAC addresses to the firmware, which 
enables the firmware and hardware to switch the packets destined for VMs on the 
host.
For traffic to flow from one eSwitch to another, it must first pass through an 
external switch or have been forwarded by a VM that has a path through both 
eSwitches.