Dcc Policy Restrictions; Creating A Dcc Policy; Table 29 Dcc Policy States - Brocade Communications Systems 53-1001763-02 Administrator's Manual

Brocade communications systems iron user manual
Table of Contents

Advertisement

TABLE 29
Policy state
No policy
Policy with no entries
Policy with entries
Virtual Fabric considerations: The DCC policies that have entries for the ports that are being moved
from one logical switch to another will be considered stale and will not be enforced. You can choose
to keep stale policies in the current logical switch or delete the stale policies after the port
movements. Use the secPolicyDelete command to delete stale DCC policies.

DCC policy restrictions

The following restrictions apply when using DCC policies:

Creating a DCC policy

DCC policies must follow the naming convention "DCC_POLICY_nnn," where nnn represents a
unique string. The maximum length is 30 characters, including the prefix DCC_POLICY_.
Device ports must be specified by port WWN. Switch ports can be identified by the switch WWN,
domain ID, or switch name followed by the port or area number. To specify an allowed connection,
enter the device port WWN, a semicolon, and the switch port identification.
The following methods of specifying an allowed connection are possible:
1. Connect to the switch and log in using an account assigned to the admin role.
2. Enter the secPolicyCreate "DCC_POLICY_nnn" command.
Fabric OS Administrator's Guide
53-1001763-02
DCC policy states
Characteristics
Any device can connect to any switch port in the fabric.
Any device can connect to any switch port in the fabric. An empty policy is the same as no
policy.
If a device WWN is specified in a DCC policy, that device is only allowed access to the
switch if connected by a switch port listed in the same policy.
If a switch port is specified in a DCC policy, it only permits connections from devices that
are listed in the policy.
Devices with WWNs that are not specified in a DCC policy are allowed to connect to the
switch at any switch ports that are not specified in a DCC policy.
Switch ports and device WWNs may exist in multiple DCC policies.
Proxy devices are always granted full access and can connect to any switch port in the
fabric.
Some older private-loop HBAs do not respond to port login from the switch and are not
enforced by the DCC policy. This does not create a security problem because these HBAs
cannot contact any device outside of their immediate loop.
DCC policies cannot manage or restrict iSCSI connections, that is, an FC Initiator connection
from an iSCSI gateway.
You cannot manage proxy devices with DCC policies. Proxy devices are always granted full
access, even if the DCC policy has an entry that restricts or limits access of a proxy device.
DCC policies are not supported on the CEE ports of the Brocade 8000.
deviceportWWN;switchWWN (port or area number)
deviceportWWN;domainID (port or area number)
deviceportWWN;switchname (port or area number)
7
DCC policies
141

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents