1 roles, 2 tasks for logical interconnects, 3 about logical interconnects – HP OneView User Manual
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19.2.1 Roles
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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:
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Add, edit, or delete an uplink set.
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Change Ethernet settings such as:
Fast MAC cache failover.
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MAC refresh interval.
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IGMP (Internet Group Management Protocol) snooping and idle timeout interval.
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Loop and pause flood protection.
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Configure a port to monitor network traffic.
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Create a logical interconnect support dump file.
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Enable and disable physical ports.
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Manage SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) access and trap destinations.
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Manage the frequency of control messages through the LACP timer.
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Reapply the logical interconnect configuration to its physical interconnects.
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Redistribute logins for uplink failover on a Fibre Channel network.
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Update the logical interconnect configuration from the logical interconnect group.
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Update the logical interconnect firmware.
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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:
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The uplink sets, which connect to data center networks.
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The mapping of networks to physical uplink ports, which is defined by the uplink sets for a
logical interconnect.
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The downlink ports, which connect through the enclosure midplane to the servers in the
enclosure.
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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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