Bonding With 10 Gbe Interfaces - HP StoreVirtual 4000 User Manual

10.0 hp lefthand storage user guide (ax696-96202, november 2012)
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fault tolerance, load balancing and/or bandwidth aggregation for the network interface cards in
the storage system. Bonds are created by joining physical NICs into a single logical interface. This
logical interface acts as the master interface, controlling and monitoring the physical slave interfaces.
Bonding two interfaces for failover provides fault tolerance at the local hardware level for network
communication. Failures of NICs, Ethernet cables, individual switch ports, and/or entire switches
can be tolerated while maintaining data availability. Bonding two interfaces for aggregation
provides bandwidth aggregation and localized fault tolerance. Bonding the interfaces for load
balancing provides both load balancing and localized fault tolerance.
NOTE:
The VSA does not support NIC bonding.
Depending on your storage system hardware, network infrastructure design, and Ethernet switch
capabilities, you can bond NICs in one of three ways:
Active-Passive. You specify a preferred NIC for the bonded logical interface to use. If the
preferred NIC fails, then the logical interface begins using another NIC in the bond until the
preferred NIC resumes operation. When the preferred NIC resumes operation, data transfer
resumes on the preferred NIC.
Link Aggregation Dynamic Mode. The logical interface uses both NICs simultaneously for data
transfer. This configuration increases network bandwidth, and if one NIC fails, the other
continues operating normally. To use Link Aggregation Dynamic Mode, your switch must
support and be configured for 802.3ad.
CAUTION:
switch. This bonding method does not protect against switch failure.
Adaptive Load Balancing (ALB). The logical interface balances data transmissions through both
NICs to enhance the functionality of the server and the network. Adaptive Load Balancing
automatically incorporates fault tolerance features as well.
Best practices
HP recommends bonding network interfaces for performance and failover. The best bond to
use depends on your network and SAN configuration.
Adaptive Load Balancing is the recommended bonding method, as it combines the benefits
of the increased transmission rates of 802.3ad with the network redundancy of Active-Passive.
Adaptive Load Balancing does not require additional switch configurations.
Verify and, if necessary, change the Speed, Duplex, Frame Size, and Flow Control settings
for both interfaces that you plan to bond.
Link Aggregation Dynamic Mode does not protect against switch failure, because both NICs
must be plugged into the same switch. Link Aggregation Dynamic Mode provides bandwidth
gains, because data is transferred over both NICs simultaneously. For Link Aggregation
Dynamic Mode, both NICs must be plugged into the same switch, and that switch must be
LACP-capable, and both support and be configured for 802.3ad aggregation.
For Active-Passive, plug the two NICs on the storage system into separate switches. While
Link Aggregation Dynamic Mode will only survive a port failure, Active-Passive will survive a
switch failure.

Bonding with 10 GbE interfaces

In storage systems with both 1 GbE and 10 GbE interfaces, users see four Ethernet interfaces listed
in the Network category TCP/IP tab window. These four interfaces can be bonded a number of
ways. Note that not all the bond configurations which are supported by HP LeftHand Storage are
supported with 10 GbE NICs.
52
Managing the network
Link Aggregation Dynamic Mode requires plugging both NICs into the same

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