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Cisco Nexus 2000/5000 vPC Design Options

Virtual PortChannel (vPC) allows two links that are connected to two different physical Cisco Nexus 5000 or 7000 switches to appear to the downstream device as a single PortChannel link.  That downstream device could be a server, Nexus 2000, or any Classical Ethernet switch.

vPC is useful to prevent spanning tree from blocking redundant links in the topology. After all you  have spent fortune and bought those expensive 10G ports and the last thing you want is for spanning tree to block them.

Having said that they are several ways to connect the Cisco Nexus Fabric Extender (FEX) to its parent the Nexus 5000 or 7000 switch. In this post I’m going to discuss supported vPC topologies for the Nexus series. I’m going to start with the Nexus 2000/5000 now and will add a separate post for the Nexus 2000/7000 options later.

 

Without vPC

Cisco Nexus 2000/5000 Without VPC

The picture above shows the supported non-vPC topologies. Topology A on the left shows a straight forward connectivity between Nexus 2000 and 5000 with a server connected to a server port on the Nexus 2000. There is no redundancy in this topology and failure of the Nexus 5000 or 2000 would cause the server to lose connectivity to the fabric. In this design you can have up to 24 FEX’s per Nexus 5500 in L2 mode and 16 FEX’s in L3.

Topology B on the right has also no vPC and NIC teaming in this case is used for failover. The solid blue link is the primary connection and the dotted link is the backup. It’s up to the OS on the server to detect any failure upstream and fail over to the backup link. Similar to A in this design you can have up to 24 FEX’s per Nexus 5500 in L2 mode and 16 FEX’s in L3.

 

With vPC

Cisco Nexus 2000/5000 VPC

The picture above hows the supported vPC topologies for the Nexus 5000. Topology C is called straight-through vPC in which each Nexus 2000 (FEX) is connected to one parent Nexus 5000 while server is dual-homed. In this case NIC on server must support LACP so that the two FEX’s appear as a single switch. Most modern Intel and HP NIC’s support LACP today. This topology supports up to 48 FEX’s (24 per Nexus 5500) in L2 mode and 32 FEX’s (16 per Nexus 5500) in L3 mode.

In topology D on the other hand each FEX is dual-homed and so is the server. So the NIC on the server must support LACP as in C. In this topology you can have up to 24 FEX’s in L2 mode and 16 FEX’s in L3.

Topology E is similar to D where each FEX is dual-homed but the server is single-homed. In this topology you can have up to 24 FEX’s in L2 mode and 16 FEX’s in L3.

 

Maximum Supported Cisco FEX As of Today:

Nexus 5000Nexus 5500
Without vPC (L2 Mode)1224
Without vPC (L3 Mode)X16
Straight-through (L2 Mode)24 (12 per Nexus 5000)48 (24 per Nexus 5500)
Straight-through (L3 Mode)X32 (16 per Nexus 5500)
Dual-homed FEX (L2 Mode)1224
Dual-homed FEX (L3 Mode)x16

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Steve Jobs: How To Live Before You Die

 

I know this speech  is all over the internet but I’m transferring some posts from my old blog to this new and it’s worth sharing this speech again it’s really classic.

This is really a must-see speech by Steve Jobs who shares 3 interesting stories from his life:  college drop-out, work at Apple, and his battle with cancer. The speech is from his Commencement address at Stanford in 2005.


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Pictures From My Trip To the Galapagos Islands & Ecuador

Some pictures from my wonderful trip to Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands. I visited San Cristobal, Santa Maria, Santa Cruz, and Espanola. And got to see all kinds of birds and animals. Here are some of the pics I have taken while exploring the wild and marine life including some pictures of sexy boobies :)

Comment below and let me know what you think.

Galapagos

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Listen to Steve Jobs’ Conversation with NPR’s Terry Gross From 1996

This interview with Steve Jobs surfaced a day after his death. I listened to it for the first time this week and could not help but notice how accurate Steve’s vision of the future was.

In the interview he predicted:

  • The use of Dynamic Web Pages would continue to grow
  • People would start searching the web for information and not just products
  • Graphical user interface is the way to go; users would want to see buttons and nice pictures on their screen
  • Everyone would eventually be using a computer and not just 5% of the population

All of his predictions from 1996 have come true today..That’s really the genius of Steve Jobs; he was a visionary who saw into the future – something many leaders are incapable of doing today.

http://www.npr.org/2011/10/06/141115121/steve-jobs-computer-science-is-a-liberal-art

What do you think? Add your comments below!


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