Fibre channel routing concepts, Figure 74, A metas – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 572

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Fabric OS Administrator’s Guide

53-1002745-02

Fibre Channel routing concepts

24

Fibre Channel routing concepts

Fibre Channel routing introduces the following concepts:

Fibre Channel router (FC router)

A switch running the FC-FC routing service. Refer to

“Supported platforms for FC-FC routing”

on

page 570 for a list of platforms that can be FC routers.

EX_Port and VEX_Port
An EX_Port and VEX_Port function similarly to an E_Port and VE_Port respectively, but
terminate at the switch and do not propagate fabric services or routing topology information
from one edge fabric to another. Refer to the Fibre Channel over IP Administrator’s Guide for
details about VE_Ports.

Edge fabric
An edge fabric is a Fibre Channel fabric with targets and initiators connected through the
supported platforms by using an EX_Port or VEX_Port.

Backbone fabric
A backbone fabric is an intermediate network that connects one or more edge fabrics.
In a SAN, the backbone fabric consists of at least one FC router and possibly a number of
Fabric OS-based Fibre Channel switches (refer to

Figure 76

on page 575).

Inter-fabric link (IFL)
The link between an E_Port and EX_Port, or VE_Port and VEX_Port, is called an inter-fabric link
(IFL). You can configure multiple IFLs from an FC router to an edge fabric.

Figure 74

shows a metaSAN consisting of three edge fabrics connected through a Brocade DCX

with inter-fabric links.

FIGURE 74

A metaSAN with inter-fabric links

Edge
fabric 2

Host

Target

Target

Edge
fabric 1

Edge
fabric 3

Fibre

Channel

switch

E_Port

E_Port

E_Port

EX_Ports

IFL

IFL

FC router

Long distance IFL

Fibre

Channel

switch

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