Control enclosures have specific connection requirements. Care must be taken to note the
orientation of each node canister in the control enclosure.
The control enclosure contains two node canisters. A label on the control enclosure
identifies each node canister and power supply unit (PSU). As Figure 1 shows, node canister 1 is on top and
node canister 2 is on the bottom. Because the node canisters are inverted, the location of the ports
and the numbering of the ports are oriented differently on each node canister. It is important to
remember this orientation when you are installing adapters and cables. Figure 1. Label showing the orientation of the node canisters and PSUs
For example, Figure 2 shows the top node canister. On this
canister, the numbering of the PCIe slots and ports goes from right to left. PCIe adapter slot 1
contains a 4-port 16 Gbps Fibre Channel adapter. PCIe slot 2 contains a 2-port 25 Gbps iWarp
Ethernet adapter. PCIe slot 3 contains a 4-port 12 Gbps SAS adapter. The onboard Ethernet and USB
ports are also shown.Figure 2. Orientation of ports on node canister 1
Figure 3 shows the bottom node canister. This
node canister has the same type and number of adapters installed. However, on the bottom canister,
the numbering of the PCI slots and ports goes from left to right.Figure 3. Orientation of ports on node canister 2
Four 10 Gbps Ethernet ports on each node canister provide system management
connections and iSCSI host connectivity. The onboard 10 Gbps Ethernet ports use RJ-45 connections,
not optical connections. The 10 Gbps ports operate at 1 Gbps when connected to a 1 Gbps switch. A
separate technician port provides access to initialization and service assistant functions. Table 1 describes each port.
Table 1. Summary of onboard Ethernet
ports
Onboard Ethernet Port
Speed
Function
1
10 Gbps
Management IP, Service IP, Host I/O
2
10 Gbps
Secondary Management IP, Host I/O
3
10 Gbps
Host I/O
4
10 Gbps
Host I/O
T
1 Gbps
Technician Port - DHCP/DNS for direct attach service management
Make the following connections for control enclosures:
Each control enclosure requires two Ethernet cables to connect it to an Ethernet switch. One
cable connects to port 1 of the top node canister, and the other cable connects to port 1 of the
bottom node canister. For 10 Gbps ports, the minimum link speed is 1 Gbps. Both Internet Protocol
Version 4 (IPv4) and Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) are supported.
Note: For increased
redundancy, a second Ethernet connection is supported for each node canister.
To ensure management IP failover, Ethernet port 1 on each node canister must be connected to the
same set of subnets. If used, Ethernet port 2 on each node canister must also be connected to the
same set of subnets. However, the subnets for Ethernet port 1 do not have to be the same as Ethernet
port 2.
With more than one control enclosure in your system, have at least two connections between each
node canister in the system unless they are in the same enclosure. These connections can be
through:
Each FlashSystem 7200 node canister has three PCIe
interface slots to support adapters.Table 2 provides an overview of the
adapters.
The 4-port SAS adapters support expansion enclosures. However, only two ports (1 and 3) are used
for SAS connections. In total, the FlashSystem 7200 control enclosures can have up
to 20 chain-linked expansion enclosures, with 10 U of expansion enclosures connected per node
canister SAS
port.
Table 2. Summary of supported adapters
Protocol
Ports
Quantity supported
32 Gbps Fibre Channel
4
0-3
16 Gbps Fibre Channel
4
25 Gbps Ethernet (RoCE)
2
25 Gbps Ethernet (iWARP)
2
12 Gbps SAS Expansion
4, but only two are active for SAS expansion chains.
Notes:
Each node canister within the control enclosure (I/O group) must be configured with the same
number and type of host interface adapters.
For SAS expansion enclosure connections, the SAS interface
adapter must be installed in PCIe slot 3.
Each node canister has four onboard 10 Gbps Ethernet ports. A
node canister can also support up to three 2-port 25 Gbps Ethernet adapters.
Table 3 shows the fabric types
that can be used for communicating between hosts, nodes, and RAID storage systems. These fabric types can be
used concurrently.
Table 3. Communications types
Communications type
Host to node
Node to storage system
Node to node
Fibre Channel SAN
Yes
Yes
Yes
iSCSI
10 Gbps Ethernet
25 Gbps Ethernet
Yes
Yes
No
iSER
25 Gbps Ethernet
Yes
No
No
RDMA over Ethernet
(ROCe or iWARP)
No
No
Yes
Each of the following adapter features includes standard SFP transceivers:
32 Gbps Fibre Channel adapter
16 Gbps Fibre Channel adapter
25 Gbps iWarp adapter
25 Gbps RoCE adapter
The 2-port 25 Gbps Ethernet adapter for iWARP and the 2-port 25 Gbps Ethernet adapter for RoCE
each support iSER host attachment and node to node communication that uses RDMA over Ethernet.
However, RoCE and iWARP are not cross-compatible; therefore, it is important to use the adapter that
matches the RDMA implementation on your SAN.