Planning Considerations for Fibre Channel Topologies
Figure 36: Cascaded fabric
One design variation is to use more than one ISL between fabric elements. This
eliminates ISLs as a single point of failure and greatly increases the fabric design
reliability.
Cascaded fabrics are well suited for applications where data access is local but not
for applications that require any-to-any connectivity. Device locality implies that
groups of servers and the storage they access are connected through the same
fabric element and that ISLs are used primarily for fabric management traffic
(Class F traffic) or low-bandwidth SAN applications. For additional information,
refer to
Ring Fabric
A ring fabric consists of a continuous string of directors or switches connected by
one or more ISLs. Each fabric element is connected to the next fabric element
(like a cascaded fabric, but with the end-point fabric elements connected).
Figure 37
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TM
PWR
ERR
Interswitch Link
Fabric Connection
"Device
Locality" on page 102.
illustrates a ring fabric topology.
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SAN High Availability Planning Guide