IBM Z10 BUISNESS CLASS Z10 BC User Manual

Page 31

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Layer 2 transport mode: When would it be used?

If you have an environment with an abundance of Linux

images in a guest LAN environment, or you need to defi ne

router guests to provide the connection between these

guest LANs and the OSA-Express3 features, then using the

Layer 2 transport mode may be the solution. If you have

Internetwork Packet Exchange (IPX), NetBIOS, and SNA pro-

tocols, in addition to Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4) and

IPv6, use of Layer 2 could provide “protocol independence.”

The OSA-Express3 features have the capability to perform

like Layer 2 type devices, providing the capability of being

protocol- or Layer-3-independent (that is, not IP-only).

With the Layer 2 interface, packet forwarding decisions

are based upon Link Layer (Layer 2) information, instead

of Network Layer (Layer 3) information. Each operating

system attached to the Layer 2 interface uses its own MAC

address. This means the traffi c can be IPX, NetBIOS, SNA,

IPv4, or IPv6.

An OSA-Express3 feature can fi lter inbound datagrams by

Virtual Local Area Network identifi cation (VLAN ID, IEEE

802.1q), and/or the Ethernet destination MAC address. Fil-

tering can reduce the amount of inbound traffi c being pro-

cessed by the operating system, reducing CPU utilization.

Layer 2 transport mode is supported by z/VM and Linux on

System z.

OSA Layer 3 Virtual MAC for z/OS

To simplify the infrastructure and to facilitate load balanc-

ing when an LPAR is sharing the same OSA Media Access

Control (MAC) address with another LPAR, each operating

system instance can now have its own unique “logical” or

“virtual” MAC (VMAC) address. All IP addresses associ-

ated with a TCP/IP stack are accessible using their own

VMAC address, instead of sharing the MAC address of

an OSA port. This applies to Layer 3 mode and to an OSA

port shared among Logical Channel Subsystems.

This support is designed to:

• Improve IP workload balancing

• Dedicate a Layer 3 VMAC to a single TCP/IP stack

• Remove the dependency on Generic Routing Encapsu-

lation (GRE) tunnels

• Improve outbound routing

• Simplify confi guration setup

• Allow WebSphere Application Server content-based

routing to work with z/OS in an IPv6 network

• Allow z/OS to use a “standard” interface ID for IPv6

addresses

• Remove the need for PRIROUTER/SECROUTER function

in z/OS

OSA Layer 3 VMAC for z/OS is exclusive to System z, and

is applicable to OSA-Express3 and OSA-Express2 features

when confi gured as CHPID type OSD (QDIO).

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