Cisco nexus 5000 series Cli Configuration Manual page 418

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Information About Fibre Channel Interfaces
S e n d f e e d b a c k t o n x 5 0 0 0 - d o c f e e d b a c k @ c i s c o . c o m
F Port
In fabric port (F port) mode, an interface functions as a fabric port. This port may be connected to a
peripheral device (host or disk) operating as an N port. An F port can be attached to only one N port. F
ports support class 3 service.
NP Port
When the switch is operating in NPV mode, the interfaces that connect the switch to the core network
switch are configured as NP ports. NP ports operate like N ports that function as proxies for multiple
physical N ports.
For more details about NP ports and NPV, see
TE Port
In trunking E port (TE port) mode, an interface functions as a trunking expansion port. It may be
connected to another TE port to create an extended ISL (EISL) between two switches. TE ports connect
to another Cisco Nexus 5000 Series switch or a Cisco MDS 9000 Family switch. They expand the
functionality of E ports to support the following:
In TE port mode, all frames are transmitted in EISL frame format, which contains VSAN information.
Interconnected switches use the VSAN ID to multiplex traffic from one or more VSANs across the same
physical link. This feature is referred to as VSAN trunking in the Cisco Nexus 5000 Series (see
Chapter 1, "Configuring VSAN
SD Port
In SPAN destination port (SD port) mode, an interface functions as a switched port analyzer (SPAN).
The SPAN feature monitors network traffic that passes though a Fibre Channel interface. This
monitoring is done using a standard Fibre Channel analyzer (or a similar switch probe) that is attached
to an SD port. SD ports do not receive frames, instead they transmit a copy of the source traffic. The
SPAN feature is nonintrusive and does not affect switching of network traffic for any SPAN source ports.
Auto Mode
Interfaces configured in auto mode can operate in one of the following modes: F port, E port, or TE port.
The port mode is determined during interface initialization. For example, if the interface is connected to
a node (host or disk), it operates in F port mode. If the interface is attached to a third-party switch, it
operates in E port mode. If the interface is attached to another switch in the Cisco Nexus 5000 Series or
Cisco MDS 9000 Family, it may become operational in TE port mode (see
VSAN
SD ports are not determined during initialization and are administratively configured.
Cisco Nexus 5000 Series Switch CLI Software Configuration Guide
1-4
VSAN trunking
Fibre Channel trace (fctrace) feature
Trunking").
Chapter 1, "Configuring N Port Virtualization."
Trunking"). TE ports support class 3 and class F service.
Chapter 1
Configuring Fibre Channel Interfaces
Chapter 1, "Configuring
OL-16597-01

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