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1 roles, 2 tasks for logical interconnects, 3 about logical interconnects – HP OneView User Manual

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19.2.1 Roles

Minimum required privileges: Infrastructure administrator or Network administrator

19.2.2 Tasks for logical interconnects

The appliance online help provides information about using the UI or the REST APIs to:

Add, edit, or delete an uplink set.

Change Ethernet settings such as:

Fast MAC cache failover.

MAC refresh interval.

IGMP (Internet Group Management Protocol) snooping and idle timeout interval.

Loop and pause flood protection.

Configure a port to monitor network traffic.

Create a logical interconnect support dump file.

Enable and disable physical ports.

Manage SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) access and trap destinations.

Manage the frequency of control messages through the LACP timer.

Reapply the logical interconnect configuration to its physical interconnects.

Redistribute logins for uplink failover on a Fibre Channel network.

Update the logical interconnect configuration from the logical interconnect group.

Update the logical interconnect firmware.

View and download the MAC address table.

19.2.3 About logical interconnects

A logical interconnect is a single administrative entity that consists of the configuration for the
interconnects in an enclosure, which includes:

The uplink sets, which connect to data center networks.

The mapping of networks to physical uplink ports, which is defined by the uplink sets for a
logical interconnect.

The downlink ports, which connect through the enclosure midplane to the servers in the
enclosure.

The connections between interconnects, which are called stacking links. Stacking links can be
internal cables (through the enclosure) or external cables between the stacking ports of
interconnects.

For a server administrator, a logical interconnect represents the available networks through the
interconnect uplinks and the interconnect downlink capabilities through a physical server’s interfaces.
For a network administrator, a logical interconnect represents an Ethernet stacking domain,
aggregation layer connectivity, stacking topology, network reachability, statistics, and
troubleshooting tools.

19.2 Managing logical interconnects and logical interconnect groups

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