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Upgrade and downgrade considerations for failover, Failback, Failback configurations in access gateway – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 68

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48

Access Gateway Administrator’s Guide

53-1001760-01

Failback

3

3. Enter the ag

--

failoverdisable -pg pgid command to disable failover.

switch:admin> ag --failoverdisable -pg 3

Failover policy is disabled for port group 3

Upgrade and downgrade considerations for Failover

Consider the following when upgrading or downgrading Fabric OS versions.

Downgrading to Fabric OS v6.3.0 or earlier is supported.

Upgrading from v6.3.0 to v6.4.0 or downgrading from v6.4.0 to v6.3.0 will not change failover
settings.

Failback

Failback policy provides a means for hosts that have failed over to automatically reroute back to
their intended mapped N_Ports when these N_Ports come back online. Failback policy is an
attribute of an N_Port and is enabled by default when a port is locked to the N_Port.

Only the originally mapped F_Ports fail back. In the case of multiple N_Port failures, only F_Ports
that were mapped to a recovered N_Port experience failback. The remaining F_Ports are not
redistributed.

NOTE

For port-based mapping, the Failback policy must be enabled on an N_Port for failback to occur. For
device-based mapping, the Failback policy has no effect. If a device is mapped to a port group, it will
always fail over to an online N_Port in the port group (or secondary N_Port if configured) and will
remain connected to this failover N_Port when the original N_Port comes back online.

Failback configurations in Access Gateway

The following sequence describes how a failback event occurs:

When an N_Port comes back online, with Failback enabled, the F_Ports that were originally
mapped to it are temporarily disabled.

The F_Port is rerouted to the primary mapped N_Port, and then re-enabled.

The host establishes a new connection with the fabric.

NOTE

The failback period is quite fast and rarely causes an I/O error at the application level.

Example : Failback

In Example 3, described in

Figure 11

on page 49, the Access Gateway N_1 remains disabled

because the corresponding F_A1 port is offline. However, N_2 comes back online. See

Figure 10

on page 45 for the original fail over scenario.

The ports F_1 and F_2 are mapped to N_1 and continue routing to N_3. Ports F_3 and F_4, which
were originally mapped to N_2, are disabled and rerouted to N_2, and then enabled.