Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) on Cisco Nexus 5010 switch ports.

2.Configuring VLANs on internal ports of the Dell PowerConnect M8024 switch, while configuring the Cisco Nexus 5010 switch to extend those VLANs in an external Nexus network.

3.Configuring Multiple VLANs per internal port to connect to the server NIC with Tag enabled. (An example of this would be supporting virtual machines (VMs) in the server scenario.)

4.Configuring multiple port aggregation groups (mapping aggregate groups to group-specific attached blade servers) and dedicating specific uplinks to carry that traffic to the Cisco network.

5.Adding VLANs in a multi-aggregate group configuration.

6.Setting up a meshed topology for redundancy.

7.Setting up a topology with Link Aggregation Group (LAG) failover.

8.Establishing access with vPC enabled across two Cisco Nexus 5010 switches.

The appendices to the Guide give detailed, step-by-step information

on how to do the deployment and provide detailed configuration

information on the hardware we used.

TESTING SCENARIOS

Our testing included establishing connections and utilizing sample

features and functions of the Dell PowerConnect M8024 switch with

the goal of showing the ease of deployment of the Dell PowerConnect

M8024 switch and accompanying Dell hardware in a Cisco Nexus

environment. The Dell blade switch operated in Simple Switch Mode

as a port aggregator. We began each scenario with a fresh test bed,

which included a Dell PowerEdge M710 blade server in the Dell

PowerEdge M1000e modular blade enclosure connected with Dell

PowerConnect M8024 switches. We include a network diagram

showing the general configuration of our switches in our test bed for

each scenario.

How to deploy the Dell M8024 family of switches in a Cisco Nexus network

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