Fabric OS Administrator’s Guide 219
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Management model for logical switches 10

Logical fabric formation

Fabric formation is not based on connectivity, but is based on the FIDs of the logical switches. The
basic order of fabric formation is as follows:
1. Base fabric forms.
2. Logical fabrics form when the base fabric is stable.
3. Traffic is initiated between the logical switches.
4. Devices start seeing each other.

Management model for logical switches

You can use one common IP address for the hardware that is shared by all of the logical switches in
the chassis and you can set up individual IPv4 addresses for each Virtual Fabric. For a
management host to manage a logical switch using the IPFC IP address, it must be physically
connected to the Virtual Fabric using an HBA.
All user operations are classified into one of the following:
Chassis management operations
These are operations that span logical switch boundaries, such as:
-Logical switch configuration (creating, deleting, modifying logical switches)
-Account management (determining which accounts can access which logical switches)
-FRU management (slotShow)
-Firmware management (one firmware applies to all logical switches, firmware upgrade, HA
failover)
Logical switch operations
These are operations that are limited to the logical switch, such as displaying or changing port
states. Logical switch operations include all operations that are not covered in the chassis
management operations.
When a user logs in, the user is assigned an active context, or active logical switch. This context
filters the view that the user gets, and determines which ports the user can see. You can change
the active context. For example, if you are working with logical switch 1, you can change the context
to logical switch 5. When you change the context to logical switch 5, you only see the ports that are
assigned to that logical switch. You do not see any of the other ports in the chassis.
The scope of logical switch operations is defined by the active context. When you are in the context
of a logical switch, you can perform port, switch, and fabric-level operations, subject to RBAC rules.
If you have permission to execute chassis-level commands, you can do so, regardless of which
logical switch context you are in.