Brocade Communications Systems 53-0001575-01 manual Fabric Topologies

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SAN Design: March 29, 2001 3:18 pm

2.0Fabric Topologies

This section explores a variety of fabric topologies and provides some specific network examples for SAN fabrics. Topologies fall into the following general categories:

Meshed Topology-- a network of switches that has at least one link to each adjacent switch. Fully meshed designs will have a connection from each switch in the fabric to all other switches in the fabric. Other topologies are a specific instance of a mesh design.

Star Topology-- central switch(es) with some or all ports used to connect to other switches; edge switches connect only to the center switches

Tier Architecture -- a switch hierarchy of two or more levels with inter switch connections that assume data paths go from one side (hosts) to the other side (targets).

Each of these topologies has advantages and disadvantages. The SAN designer should be aware of the features and benefits of each design when building a solution for a specific customer environment. Some advantages and disadvantages are detailed here:

Meshed Topology Designs

Provide any-to-any connectivity for devices

Good for designs where locality of data is know and hosts and targets can be located on the same switch but where some amount of any-to-any connections are needed

Provide for resiliency on switch failure with the fabric able to re-route traffic via other switches in the mesh

Allows for expansion at the edges without disruption of the fabric and attached devices

Allows for scaling in size as port count demands increase (see SAN building block in the sample configuration section)

Host and storage devices can be placed anywhere in the fabric

Star Topology Designs

Two hops maximum, consistent latency

Multiple equal cost paths allowing for load sharing at time of configuration of fabric

Easy to start small and scale

Two paths through the core from edge switches allows for failover

53-0001575-01

BROCADE Technical Note

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Contents SAN Fabrics Design and Best Practices Guide Design and Best Practices Guide Fabric Topologies Tier Architecture Designs Single fabric, non-resilient Approach to take to SAN design for high availability Hosts Sample Switc H Configura Tions Two Fabrics -- Simplest Redundant Fabric Configuration Extended Fabric Example Numbers above are labels for the links, see text Design Guidance Edge Two Switch Core Star SAN Design Design Criteria /TESTED AN D Supported Configurations Star Topologies Possible with 2 switch cores Three Tier Design used in Fabric Aware Testing at Brocade MUlti Tier SAN Design across an Extended Link Twenty Switch Three Tier Design also a Star configuration FOS Fabric Bring UP Valid and Invalid Configurations using Inter Switch Links ZONING/NAME Space Switch HOP Coun T SAN MAN Agement NON Public Devic ES AN D Existin G FC-AL Disk Equipmen T Brocade Technical Note Glossary Gbic Topology Copyright