Terminology, Failover (fo), Load balancing – Dell Emulex Family of Adapters User Manual

Page 747: Smart load balancing, Terminology failover (fo) load balancing

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OneCommand NIC Teaming and VLAN Manager User Manual

P009415-01A Rev. A

1. Overview

Terminology

747

Terminology

Team – A group of available adapters working together and presented as a

single adapter to applications.

VLAN – A Virtual LAN allows computers or virtual machines (hypervisor

guests) to act as if they are connected by a private, directly connected network.

You can assign VLANs to teams or individual adapters.

VLAN Bound adapter – A single adapter to which you assigned VLANs. This

adapter cannot be part of a team. These are also called VLAN adapters.

Available adapter – An adapter that is not a member of a team and has no

assigned VLANs. This adapter is also called a free or unbound adapter.

Reactivation delay – The amount of time that an adapter must be ready to carry

traffic before it is allowed to rejoin its team.

Failover (FO)

A failover team consists of at least two and at the most three members; a primary and

the remaining secondary members. When a team is created, the primary member is

active and the remaining secondary members are passive. When the primary team

member disconnects (due to link down, link disabled or any other reason) the failover

mechanism selects one of the secondary team members (which is in a link up state) at

random and traffic continues.
When a previously failed primary team member reports a link up state, failback to the

primary member occurs only if the team was created with auto failback enabled. For

teams created with auto failback disabled, traffic will continue on one of the secondary

adapters. By default all the failover team members use the same MAC address, the

MAC address of the primary team member.

Load Balancing

Smart Load Balancing

Team load balancing provides both load balancing and fault tolerance. Team load

balancing works with any Ethernet switch and does not require any switch

configuration. The team advertises multiple MAC addresses and one or more IP

addresses. The virtual team adapter selects the team MAC address from the list of load

balancing members. When the server receives an address resolution protocol (ARP)

request, the software-networking stack always sends an ARP reply with the team MAC

address. To begin the load balancing process, the intermediate teaming driver modifies

this ARP reply by changing the source MAC address to match one of the physical

adapters.
Load balancing enables both transmit and receive load balancing based on load

balancing function to maintain in-order delivery of frames.

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