Configuring the allowed domain id list, Configuring a domain id for a switch, Fip snooping configuration example – H3C Technologies H3C S12500-X Series Switches User Manual

Page 42: Network requirements, Configuration procedure, Required.)

Advertising
background image

33

Step Command

Remarks

1.

Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.

Enter VSAN view.

vsan vsan-id

N/A

3.

Configure a priority
value for the switch.

priority value

By default, the priority value of a
switch is 128.

Configuring the allowed domain ID list

Configuring the allowed domain ID list has an effect on switches as follows:

Principal switch—Can only assign domains IDs within the allowed domain ID list. If the allowed
domain ID list configured does not include any of the already assigned domain IDs or manually

configured domain IDs, the configuration will fail.

Non-principal switch—The manually configured domain ID must be within the allowed domain ID
list. Otherwise, the configuration will fail. The principal switch must assign the switch a domain ID

within the allowed domain ID list. Otherwise, the switch refuses the assigned domain ID and

isolates its interface connected to the principal switch. If the runtime domain ID for a switch is

beyond the new allowed ID list, the configuration will also fail.

H3C recommends that you specify the same allowed domain ID list for the member switches of a VSAN.
To configure the allowed domain IDs for a switch:

Step Command

Remarks

1.

Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.

Enter VSAN view.

vsan vsan-id

N/A

3.

Configure the allowed
domain IDs for the switch.

allowed-domain-id

domain-id-list

By default, the allowed domain IDs are 1

to 239.

Configuring a domain ID for a switch

In different scenarios, the configured domain ID has different meanings.

In a statically built fabric, the configured domain ID is the actual domain ID of the switch.

In a dynamically built fabric, the configured domain ID is desired by the switch but might not be the
actual domain ID.

To statically build a fabric, you must manually configure a domain ID for each switch.
To dynamically build a fabric, you can configure a desired domain ID for a switch, but the domain ID
assigned to the switch might not be the desired one.
The configured domain ID can be static type or preferred type.

In a statically built fabric, the two types make no difference.

In a dynamically built fabric, when a non-principal switch fails to obtain the desired domain ID from
the principal switch, the non-principal switch can use another domain ID assigned by the principal

switch if the preferred type is configured. The non-principal switch will isolate the upstream link and

refuse other domain IDs assigned by the principal switch if the static type is configured.

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products: