IBM Z10 EC User Manual

Page 26

Advertising
background image

onto System z10. With reduced latency, improved through-

put, and up to 96 ports of LAN connectivity, (when all are

4-port features, 24 features per server), you can “do more

with less.”

The key benefi ts of OSA-Express3 compared to OSA-

Express2 are:

• Reduced latency (up to 45% reduction) and increased

throughput (up to 4x) for applications

• More physical connectivity to service the network and

fewer required resources:

– Fewer CHPIDs to defi ne and manage

– Reduction in the number of required I/O slots

– Possible reduction in the number of I/O drawers

– Double the port density of OSA-Express2

– A solution to the requirement for more than 48 LAN

ports (now up to 96 ports)

The OSA-Express3 features are exclusive to System z10.

OSA-Express2 availability

OSA-Express2 Gigabit Ethernet and 1000BASE-T Ethernet

continue to be available for ordering, for a limited time, if

you are not yet in a position to migrate to the latest release

of the operating system for exploitation of two ports per

PCI-E adapter and if you are not resource-constrained.

Historical summary: Functions that continue to be sup-

ported by OSA-Express3 and OSA-Express2

• Queued Direct Input/Output (QDIO) – uses memory

queues and a signaling protocol to directly exchange

data between the OSA microprocessor and the network

software for high-speed communication.

– QDIO Layer 2 (Link layer) – for IP (IPv4, IPv6) or non-

IP (AppleTalk, DECnet, IPX, NetBIOS, or SNA) work-

loads. Using this mode the Open Systems Adapter

(OSA) is protocol-independent and Layer-3 indepen-

dent. Packet forwarding decisions are based upon the

Medium Access Control (MAC) address.

– QDIO Layer 3 (Network or IP layer) – for IP workloads.

Packet forwarding decisions are based upon the IP

address. All guests share OSA’s MAC address.

• Jumbo frames in QDIO mode (8992 byte frame size)

when operating at 1 Gbps (fi ber or copper) and 10 Gbps

(fi ber).

• 640 TCP/IP stacks per CHPID – for hosting more images.

• Large send for IPv4 packets – for TCP/IP traffi c and CPU

effi ciency, offl oading the TCP segmentation processing

from the host TCP/IP stack to the OSA-Express feature.

• Concurrent LIC update – to help minimize the disrup-

tion of network traffi c during an update; when properly

confi gured, designed to avoid a confi guration off or on

(applies to CHPID types OSD and OSN).

• Multiple Image Facility (MIF) and spanned channels – for

sharing OSA among logical channel subsystems

The OSA-Express3 and OSA-Express2 Ethernet features

support the following CHPID types

:

CHPID OSA-Express3, Purpose/Traffi c

Type OSA-Express2

Features

OSC 1000BASE-T

OSA-Integrated Console Controller (OSA-ICC)

TN3270E, non-SNA DFT, IPL to CPC and LPARs

Operating system console operations

OSD 1000BASE-T

Queued Direct Input/Output (QDIO)

GbE

TCP/IP traffi c when Layer 3

10 GbE

Protocol-independent when Layer 2

OSE 1000BASE-T

Non-QDIO, SNA/APPN

®

/HPR and/or TCP/IP

passthru (LCS)

OSN 1000BASE-T

OSA for NCP

GbE

Supports channel data link control (CDLC)

OSA-Express3 10 GbE

OSA-Express3 10 Gigabit Ethernet LR

The OSA-Express3 10 Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) long reach

(LR) feature has two ports. Each port resides on a PCIe

adapter and has its own channel path identifi er (CHPID).

26

Advertising