Introduction, Adapter aliases and team identification – Dell Emulex Family of Adapters User Manual
Page 780

OneCommand NIC Teaming and VLAN Manager User Manual
P009415-01A Rev. A
5. OneCommand NIC Teaming Manager Command Line Interface
Introduction
780
5. OneCommand NIC Teaming Manager
Command Line Interface
Introduction
The OneCommand
™
NIC Teaming Manager Command Line Interface (OCTeamCmd)
is a companion to the OneCommand NIC Teaming and VLAN Manager. Use the
OCTeamCmd in scripted operations from within shell scripts or batch files.
Each time you run this application from the command line, a single operation is
performed. The first parameter of this command is the requested operation. When the
specified operation is completed, the command prompt is displayed. Some of the
OCTeamCmd commands require one or more additional parameters that specify the
nature of the command.
When creating or modifying teams and VLANs, changes to adapter names may not
completely propagate through the system until the system has been restarted. Before
the systems is restarted, the teams and VLANs will function properly, however some
operating system facilities may continue to use the adapter names before the change
was made.
Note: Do not configure VLANs on adapters used with NIC teaming.
Note: On Server Core systems, utilities such as SCONFIG and SYSTEMINFO identify
a network object with the Device Manager friendly name the object had at boot
time or when the object was created, whichever is most recent. As a result,
newly created teams and VLANs are identified generically until the system is
rebooted. Until a reboot, these utilities do not identify teams with their team
names nor do these utilities identify VLANs with their VLAN IDs. Likewise,
when deleting teams or removing adapters from teams, these utilities continue
to show such an adapter with its team member name until a reboot occurs. The
OCTeamCmd does show the correct name, even though these Server Core
utilities do not. Rebooting is not necessary for proper system operation.
However, if you manually assign IP addresses to teams and VLANs, you may
want to reboot as the IP address assignment is easier when the network objects
are properly identified.
Adapter Aliases and Team Identification
Adapters are identified within Windows by using the adapter name.
The OCTeamCmd also uses aliases to identify physical adapters. Adapter aliases are
assigned by the OCTeamCmd as adapters are discovered and take the form of “nicX”
where “X” is a unique integer. Adapter aliases, once assigned, exist for as long as the
adapter's GUID does not change. Any events that cause Windows to treat an existing
adapter as if it is newly installed, causes a new alias to be assigned to that adapter the
next time a OCTeamCmd command is run.