Teaming concepts – Dell Broadcom NetXtreme Family of Adapters User Manual

Page 102

Advertising
background image

Broadcom Teaming Services: Broadcom NetXtreme II® Network Adapter User Guide

file:///C|/Users/Nalina_N_S/Documents/NetXtremeII/English/teamsvcs.htm[9/5/2014 3:45:08 PM]

HSRP

Hot Standby Router Protocol

ICMP

Internet Control Message Protocol

IGMP

Internet Group Management Protocol

IP

Internet Protocol

IPv6

Version 6 of the IP Protocol

iSCSI

Internet Small Computer Systems Interface

L2

Layer 2. Used to describe network traffic that is not offloaded, and where hardware only performs

Layer 2 operations on the traffic. Layer 3 (IP) and Layer 4 (TCP) protocols are processed in software.

L4

Layer 4. Used to describe network traffic that is heavily offloaded to the hardware, where much of the

Layer 3 (IP) and Layer 4 (TCP) processing is done in the hardware to improve performance.

LACP

Link Aggregation Control Protocol

Link Aggregation

(802.3ad)

Switch-dependent load balancing and failover type of team with LACP in which the intermediate driver

manages outgoing traffic and the switch manages incoming traffic.

LOM

LAN on Motherboard

MAC

media access control

NDIS

Network Driver Interface Specification

NLB

Network Load Balancing (Microsoft)

PXE

Preboot Execution Environment

RAID

redundant array of inexpensive disks

Smart Load

Balancing™ and

Failover

Switch-independent failover type of team in which the primary team member handles all incoming and

outgoing traffic while the standby team member is idle until a failover event (for example, loss of link

occurs). The intermediate driver (BASP) manages incoming/outgoing traffic.

Smart Load

Balancing (SLB)

Switch-independent load balancing and failover type of team, in which the intermediate driver

manages outgoing/incoming traffic.

TCP

Transmission Control Protocol

TOE

TCP Offload Engine. This is the hardware that is capable of handling stateful fastpath offloading of TCP

and IP processing.

UDP

User Datagram Protocol

WINS

Windows name service

WLBS

Windows Load Balancing Service

Teaming Concepts

Network Addressing

Teaming and Network Addresses

Description of Teaming Types

TOE Teaming

The concept of grouping multiple physical devices to provide fault tolerance and load balancing is not new. It has been around
for years. Storage devices use RAID technology to group individual hard drives. Switch ports can be grouped together using
technologies such as Cisco Gigabit EtherChannel, IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation, Bay Network Multilink Trunking, and
Extreme Network Load Sharing. Network interfaces on Dell servers can be grouped together into a team of physical ports
called a virtual adapter.

Network Addressing

To understand how teaming works, it is important to understand how node communications work in an Ethernet network. This
document is based on the assumption that the reader is familiar with the basics of IP and Ethernet network communications.
The following information provides a high-level overview of the concepts of network addressing used in an Ethernet network.
Every Ethernet network interface in a host platform, such as a computer system, requires a globally unique Layer 2 address
and at least one globally unique Layer 3 address. Layer 2 is the Data Link Layer, and Layer 3 is the Network layer as defined
in the OSI model. The Layer 2 address is assigned to the hardware and is often referred to as the MAC address or physical
address. This address is pre-programmed at the factory and stored in NVRAM on a network interface card or on the system
motherboard for an embedded LAN interface. The Layer 3 addresses are referred to as the protocol or logical address

Advertising