Fcoe Initialization Protocol Snooping; Fip Snooping Requirements - Lenovo CN4093 Application Manual

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FCoE Initialization Protocol Snooping

FIP Snooping Requirements

© Copyright Lenovo 2015
FCoE Initialization Protocol (FIP) snooping is an FCoE feature. In order to enforce
point-to-point links for FCoE traffic outside the regular Fibre Channel topology,
Ethernet ports used in FCoE can be automatically and dynamically configured
with Access Control Lists (ACLs).
Using FIP snooping, the CN4093 examines the FIP frames normally exchanged
between the FCF and ENodes to determine information about connected FCoE
devices. This information is used to create narrowly tailored ACLs that permit
expected FCoE traffic to and from confirmed Fibre Channel nodes, and deny all
other undesirable FCoE or FIP traffic.
The following are required for implementing the FIP snooping bridge feature:
The CN4093 must be connected to the Fibre Channel network through a FCF
such as a Lenovo Rackswitch G8264CS, another Lenovo CN4093 10Gb Converged
Scalable Switch or a Cisco Nexus 5000 Series Switch.
For each CN4093 switch port participating in FCoE, the connected server must
use a FCoE-licensed Converged Network Adapter (CNA) and must have the
FCoE license enabled (if applicable) on the CNA.
CEE must be turned on (see
is on, the DCBX, PFC and ETS features are enabled and configured with default
FCoE settings. These features may be reconfigured, but must remain enabled for
FCoE to function.
FIP snooping must be turned on (see
page
286). When FIP snooping is turned on, the feature is enabled on all ports by
default. The administrator can disable FIP snooping on individual ports that do
not require FCoE, but FIP snooping must remain enabled on all FCoE ports for
FCoE to function.
"Turning CEE On or Off" on page
"Global FIP Snooping Settings" on
282). When CEE
Chapter 17: FCoE and CEE
285

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