Zoning a fabric

If EFCM or HAFM are used to manage the fabric, it is recommended to use EFCM or HAFM to manage the fabric zoning. If EFCM or HAFM are not used and other McDATA switch models are in the fabric, it is recommended to use SANpilot or Embedded Web Server to manage the fabric zoning. If all switches in the fabric are McDATA 4Gb SAN switches, use the zoning management of these switches as described in this manual. Zoning enables you to divide the ports and devices of the fabric into zones for more efficient and secure communication among functionally grouped nodes.

The McDATA 4Gb SAN Switch supports port/domain zoning in Standard/Open Fabric interop mode, other M-Series directors and edge switches do not. Therefore, only WWN zoning is supported in Standard/Open Fabric interop mode when McDATA 4Gb SAN Switch is attached to other McDATA switches. FC address zoning is not supported by other McDATA switches, and is not recommended for use in McDATA 4Gb SAN Switch.

This subsection addresses the following topics:

Zoning concepts, page 50

Managing the zoning database, page 52

Managing zone sets, page 56

Managing zones, page 58

Managing aliases, page 60

Merging fabrics and zoning, page 61

Zoning concepts

The following zoning concepts provide some context for the zoning tasks described in this section:

Zones, page 50

Aliases, page 50

Zone sets, page 51

Zoning database, page 51

Zones

A zone is a named group of ports, devices, or aliases that can communicate with each other. Membership in a zone can be defined by switch domain ID and port number, or device World Wide Name (WWN). Devices within a zone can only communicate with other devices in the same zone. Zones can overlap; that is, a device can participate in more than one zone. Zoning divides the fabric for purposes of controlling discovery. Devices within the same zone automatically discover and communicate freely with all other members of the same zone. The zone boundary is not secure; traffic across zones can occur if addressed correctly. Zones that include members from multiple switches need not include the ports of the inter-switch links.

WWN entries define zone membership by the World Wide Name of the attached device. With this membership method, you can move WWN member devices to different switch ports in different zones without having to edit the member entry as you would with a domain ID/port number member. Furthermore, unlike FCID members, WWN zone members are not affected by changes in the fabric that could change the FC address of an attached device.

Domain ID/Port number entries define zone membership by switch domain ID and port number. All devices attached to the specified port become members of the zone. The specified port must be an F_Port or an FL_Port.

Aliases

To make it easier to add a group of ports or devices to one or more zones, you can create an alias. An alias is a named set of ports or devices that are grouped together for convenience. Unlike zones, aliases impose no communication restrictions between its members. You can add an alias to one or more zones. However, you cannot add a zone to an alias, nor can an alias be a member of another alias.

50 Managing fabrics