Logical switch overview, Default logical switch, Figure 17 – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 276: Switch before

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276

Fabric OS Administrator’s Guide

53-1002745-02

Logical switch overview

10

This chapter describes the logical switch and logical fabric features. For information about device
sharing with Virtual Fabrics, refer to

“FC-FC routing and Virtual Fabrics”

on page 606.

For information about supported switches and port types, refer to

“Supported platforms for

Virtual Fabrics”

on page 286.

Virtual Fabrics and Admin Domains are mutually exclusive and are not supported at the same time
on a switch.

NOTE

A note on terminology: Virtual Fabrics is the name of the suite of features. A logical fabric is a type
of fabric that you can create using the Virtual Fabrics suite of features.

Logical switch overview

Traditionally, each switch and all the ports in the switch act as a single Fibre Channel switch (FC
switch) that participates in a single fabric. The logical switch feature allows you to divide a physical
chassis into multiple fabric elements. Each of these fabric elements is referred to as a logical
switch
. Each logical switch functions as an independent self-contained FC switch.

NOTE

Each chassis can have multiple logical switches.

Default logical switch

To use the Virtual Fabrics features, you must first enable Virtual Fabrics on the switch. Enabling
Virtual Fabrics creates a single logical switch in the physical chassis. This logical switch is called
the default logical switch, and it initially contains all of the ports in the physical chassis.

Figure 17

shows a switch before and after enabling Virtual Fabrics. In this example, the switch has

10 ports, labeled P0 through P9.

FIGURE 17

Switch before and after enabling Virtual Fabrics

Before enabling Virtual Fabrics

After enabling Virtual Fabrics

Physical chassis

Default logical switch

Physical chassis

P9

P0

P1

P2

P4

P3

P2

P1

P0

P3

P4

P5

P6

P7

P8

P9

P8

P7

P5

P6

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