3. Enable FIPs.
4. Turn on UFP.
5. Configure port as UFP.
6. Configure virtual port.
7. Configure vPort FCoE mode.
8. Configure vPort default VLAN.
9. Specify QoS parameters for the vPort.
10. Enable tagging/trunk mode on the port.
Example 6: Layer 2 Failover Configuration
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G8264(config)# fcoe fips enable
RS G8264(config)# ufp enable
G8264(config)# ufp port 1 enable
Warning: "Tagging/Trunkmode" is enabled on UFP port 1
G8264(config)# ufp port 1 vport 2
G8264(config_ufp_vport)# network mode fcoe
G8264(config_ufp_vport)# network defaultvlan 1102
G8264(config_ufp_vport)# qos bandwidth min 25 (in percentage)
G8264(config_ufp_vport)# qos bandwidth max 100 (in percentage)
Note: Port 2 is connected to the upstream FCF.
G8264(config)# interface port 2
G8264(configif)# switchport mode trunk
G8264(configif)# switchport trunk native vlan 1
G8264(configif)# switchport trunk allowed vlan add 1102
G8264(configif)# exit
While configuring a failover trigger, you cannot use the member command for a
physical port that has vPorts configured. Instead, you must use the vmember
command to add the vPorts as members of a failover trigger. The following
example includes the commands to configure a failover trigger using a physical
port 8 (UFP not enabled) and vPorts 9.1, 9.2, 9.3, and 9.4 configured on
UFP‐enabled physical port 9.
See "Example 1: Access Mode" on page
mode. Follow the steps below for configuring the failover trigger:
421 for steps to configure a vPort in access