beautypg.com

HP Cisco MDS 8Gb Fabric Switch for HP BladeSystem c-Class User Manual

Page 47

background image

Cisco MDS 8Gb Fabric Switch for HP BladeSystem c-Class User Guide

47

G_Port

Generic port. A port that can operate as an E_Port or F_Port. A port is defined as a

G_Port when it is not yet connected or has not yet assumed a specific function in the

fabric. See also

E_Port

,

F_Port

,

U_Port

.

hard address

The AL_PA that an NL_Port attempts to acquire during loop initialization. See also

defined zone configuration

.

idle

Continuous transmission of an ordered set over an FC link when no data is being

transmitted, to keep the link active and maintain bit, byte, and word synchronization.

integrated fabric

The fabric created by connecting multiple HP switches with multiple ISL cables, and

configuring the switches to handle traffic as a seamless group.

ISL trunking

The distribution of traffic over the combined bandwidth of multiple ISLs. A set of

trunked ISLs is called a trunking group; the ports in a trunking group are called

trunking ports.

isolated E_Port

An E_Port that is online but not operational due to overlapping domain IDs or

nonidentical parameters (such as E_D_TOVs). See also

E_D_TOV

.

ITRC

IT Resource Center.

K28.5

A special 10-bit character that indicates the beginning of a transmission word that

performs FC control and signaling functions. The first seven bits are the common

pattern.

kernel flash

Flash (temporary) memory connected to the peripheral bus of the processor and visible

within the memory space of the processor. Also called user flash.

L_Port

Loop port. A node loop port (NL_Port) or fabric loop port (FL_Port) that has arbitrated

loop capabilities. An L_Port can be in one of two modes:

Fabric mode: Connected to a port that is not loop capable and is using fabric

protocol.

Loop mode: In an arbitrated loop and using loop protocol. An L_Port in loop mode

can also be in participating mode or non-participating mode. See also

non-participating mode

.

latency

The time required to transmit a frame from the time it is sent until it arrives. Together,

latency and bandwidth define the speed and capacity of a link or system.

link

With respect to FC, a physical connection between two ports, consisting of both

transmit and receive fibers.

link services

A protocol for link-related actions.

LIP

Loop initialization primitive. The signal that begins initialization in a loop. It indicates

either loop failure or the resetting of a node.

LM_TOV

Loop master time-out value. The minimum time that the loop master waits for a loop

initialization sequence to return.

loop failure

Loss of signal within a loop for any period of time; loss of synchronization for longer

than the time-out value.

Loop_ID

A hexadecimal value representing one of the 127 possible AL_PA values in an

arbitrated loop. See also

AL_PA

.

loop initialization The logical procedure used by an L_Port to discover its environment. Can be used to

assign AL_PA addresses, detect loop failure, or reset a node. See also

AL_PA

.

LPSM

Loop port state machine. The logical entity that performs arbitrated loop protocols and

defines the behavior of L_Ports when they require access to an arbitrated loop. See

also

L_Port

.

LWL

Long wavelength. A type of fiber optic cabling that is based on 1300 mm lasers and

supports link speeds up to 2 Gb/s. May also refer to the type of transceiver. See also

SWL

.

master port

The port that determines the routing paths for all traffic flowing through a trunking

group. One of the ports in the first ISL in the trunking group is designated as the master

port for that group. See also ISL trunking.