802.3Ad Dynamic With Fault Tolerance; Switch-Assisted Dual Channel Load Balancing - HP Rx2620-2 - Integrity - 0 MB RAM Manual

Integrity servers with microsoft windows server 2003 and windows server 2008 hp integrity network adapter teaming
Hide thumbs Also See for Rx2620-2 - Integrity - 0 MB RAM:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

technology has been designed to allow for flexibility. Therefore, the NCU may allow
configuration of an SLB team that will not work correctly with a particular vendor's switch.
The switch's load-balancing algorithm should be set to XOR or SOURCE-BASED but not
DESTINATION-BASED (refer to the sections,
Tolerance (SLB)"
The switch's load-balancing algorithm should be set to balance by IP address if most traffic
destined for the server originates on a different network and must traverse a router.

802.3ad Dynamic with Fault Tolerance

802.3ad Dynamic is exactly like SLB in every way except for one – switch configuration of Port
Trunking. With SLB, the switch ports connected to the team must have Port Trunking manually
enabled in order for SLB to work correctly. With 802.3ad Dynamic, the Link Aggregation Control
Protocol (LACP) is used by the team to communicate with the switch and automatically configure
Port Trunking. This eliminates the need for manual configuration on the switch.
All other aspects of 802.3ad Dynamic are identical to SLB. Refer to the SLB sections for more
details.

Switch-assisted Dual Channel Load Balancing

Switch-assisted Dual Channel Load Balancing, simply referred to as Dual Channel, is a special
team type designed by HP to accomplish everything that NFT, TLB and SLB team types
accomplish all in a single team type.
NOTE:
Switch-assisted Dual Channel load balancing is only available on systems running
Windows Server 2003.
Prior to Dual Channel, an HP Integrity Network Adapter Teaming user had to choose between
inbound load balancing or switch redundancy. Inbound load balancing is defined as the ability
to receive server traffic on more than one teamed port in the same team. Switch redundancy is
defined as connecting teamed ports to more than one switch to recover from a switch failure.
Prior to the introduction of Dual Channel, HP Integrity Network Adapter Teaming did not
provide a team type that would accomplish both needs:
TLB can provide switch redundancy since it allows you to connect teamed ports from the
same team to one or more switches (refer to
balancing. However, TLB does not support receive load balancing.
and
"Cisco
EtherChannel").
"Switch-assisted Load Balancing with Fault
Figure
4-18). TLB also supports transmit load
Types of HP Integrity Network Adapter Teams
73

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Integrity series

Table of Contents