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LACP Configuration and multi-chassis

Etherchannel on Nexus 7000 with vPC, Part 1 of


2
In Nexus on September 13, 2010 at 11:21
The other day I received a question on Ether-channel and the Nexus
7000 - based on the question I felt it would be also good to
include the information here.

This will be a 2-part post, first part is the Nexus configuration
for vPC, the second post will be on the mutli-chassis ether-channel
configuration around the 3750 as well as the Nexus 7000 switches.
What are the benefits of Multi-chassis (vPC) ether-channel?
Basically all your up-links from your switches are in FORWARDING
mode, nothing is in blocking mode in your spanning tree domain.
What this means is that you have a loop free topology in your
data center and all links can be utilized.

Below is the diagram of the configuration that I will be
showing here. There will be a Layer 2 Ether-channel vPC between
the Nexus 7010-1 and Nexus 7010-2 (Orangish line), a Layer 3
Ether-channel for vPC keep-alive (Red line), as well as a
mutli-chassis (vPC) ether-channel from a 3750 stack to Nexus 7010-1
and Nexus 7010-2 with all links in a single ether-channel bundle.



Configuration for both of the Nexus switches is the same except where
noted.


Configuration for the Nexus switches
First thing to do is enable the vPC feature:
feature vpc

Once you have enabled the vPC feature, you should create your keep-alive
links.
Here I create a port-channel via LACP over ports 9/1 and 10/1. You will
also
notice that I have spread the channel over two line cards. This has been
done
to help assure maximum redundancy. If a card where to go bad, the other
card would
still be active in the port-channel.
interface Ethernet9/1
description [----[ vPC KeepAlive to CoreSwitch2 ]----]
channel-group 101 mode active ! Assign port to port-channel 101 via
LACP
no shutdown
interface Ethernet10/1
description [----[ vPC KeepAlive to CoreSwitch2 ]----]
channel-group 101 mode active
no shutdown

Now we can create the VRF for the keep-alive link. I suggest using a
dedicated
VRF for security and sanity purpose. This VRF will not participate in your
global routing table, thus allowing for more stability and also the
prevention
of duplicate IP addresses in the network.
vrf context VPC100_KA

Now we can create the Layer 3 interface on the port-channel and assign it
to the new VRF, VPC100_KA
interface port-channel101
description [----[ vPC Keep-Alive link between CoreSwitches ]----]
vrf member VPC100_KA ! Assign this interface into the appropriate
VRF
ip address 10.10.10.1/30 ! The other side of the link is .2/30


Now you can configuration the vPC Peer links (Orangish lines). Since I am
using
10G links for this connection, I have set the rate mode to Dedicated. This
prevents
any chance for over subscription on the 10G port. It also disables the
other 3 ports in
group, so you need to keep that in mind when you are designing your
deployment.
interface Ethernet7/1
description [-[ vPC Connection to Nexus 7010-2 - E7/1 ]-]
switchport
switchport mode trunk ! Set the mode to trunk
rate-mode dedicated force ! Force the rate-mode
mtu 9216
udld enable ! Since this is also fiber, enable UDLD
channel-group 100 mode active ! Assign to port-channel 100
no shutdown
!
interface Ethernet8/1
description [-[ vPC Connection to Nexus 7010-2 - E8/1 ]-]
switchport
switchport mode trunk
rate-mode dedicated force
mtu 9216
udld enable
channel-group 100 mode active
no shutdown
!

Now to configure the port-channel as a vPC link as well as the vPC
domain information.
interface port-channel100
description [-[ vPC Peer-Link between Nexus Switches ]-]
switchport
switchport mode trunk
vpc peer-link ! Assign this port-channel as a vpc peer-link
spanning-tree port type network
mtu 9216
!
vpc domain 100
role priority 16000 ! Here I hard-coded switch 1 to be the vPC master.
switch 2 was left as the default
peer-keepalive destination 10.10.10.2 source 10.10.10.1 vrf VPC100_KA
! The other side has the IP addresses reversed
Had to move the formatting above to get the command to fit, sorry.

Let's check the port-channel and make sure it is up with the appropriate
members.
As you can see from the output, Eth7/1 and Eth8/1 are members of the
channel.

N7K1# sh int port-channel 100
port-channel100 is up
[------ SNIP - Output omitted! ------]
Members in this channel: Eth7/1, Eth8/1
N7K1#

Also check the vPC and the vPC keep-alive link
N7K1# sh vpc
Legend:
(*) - local vPC is down, forwarding via vPC peer-link
vPC domain id : 100
Peer status : peer adjacency formed ok
vPC keep-alive status : peer is alive
Configuration consistency status : success
Type-2 consistency status : success
vPC role : primary, operational secondary
Number of vPCs configured : 9
Peer Gateway : Disabled
Dual-active excluded VLANs : -
vPC Peer-link status
---------------------------------------------------------------------
id Port Status Active vlans
-- ---- ------ --------------------------------------------------
1 Po100 up 1-224

N7K1# sh vpc peer-keepalive

vPC keep-alive status : peer is alive
--Peer is alive for : (1486816) seconds, (684) msec
--Send status : Success
--Last send at : 2010.09.11 12:38:36 872 ms
--Sent on interface : Po101
--Receive status : Success
--Last receive at : 2010.09.11 12:38:36 872 ms
--Received on interface : Po101
--Last update from peer : (0) seconds, (161) msec

vPC Keep-alive parameters
--Destination : 10.10.10.2
--Keepalive interval : 1000 msec
--Keepalive timeout : 5 seconds
--Keepalive hold timeout : 3 seconds
--Keepalive vrf : VPC100_KA
--Keepalive udp port : 3200
--Keepalive tos : 192
N7K1#

As of now, both switches are connected via vPC.

This concludes the first post, the second post will be up shortly and will
focus
around the Cisco 3750 configuration as well as the associated configs on
the
Nexus 7000 switches.


LACP Configuration and multi-chassis
Etherchannel on Nexus 7000 with vPC, Part 2 of
2
In Nexus on September 13, 2010 at 19:47
This is the second part in a two part post on Etherchannel on the
Nexus 7000. In the first part I covered how to configure vPC on
the Nexus 7000, here I will cover what it takes to get a remote
switch to uplink to the Nexus 7000 core switches using
vPC/Multi-chassis etherchannel.

Here is a diagram depicting the layout that we are using. For
this part of the post, we will focus on the blue line that is
connecting both Nexus switches to the 3750 Stack.


On the Cisco 3750 switches (they are in a stack configuration of
two switches) we need to configure the interface to be in a
channel-group - for this example Iam using Channel-Group 6
(the switch is actually named StackSwitch06). What you will
also notice is that you configure the 3750 Stack just like it
was only connected to one switch, just one single port-channel
that consists of all the ports connected to both Nexus switches.

For this example we are using ports G1/0/1, G1/0/24, G2/0/1,
and G2/0/24. One thing I want to mention, when you are thinking
about your uplinks to your core switches, be aware of the switch
ASIC layout. I say this because I have seen many times when
companies use ports 23 and 24 to uplink to a core switch.
The problem with this is that:
1) The same ASIC is probably controlling both ports, and if
it goes bad your links to the switch are gone and your
switch is also isolated.
2) You have a better chance of oversubscribing the ASIC
before the uplink when utilization is high on the channel.

Now, onto the configuration, first up the Cisco 3750s.
interface GigabitEthernet 1/0/1
description [----[ Uplink to N7K1 - E9/10 ]----]
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
switchport mode trunk
channel-group 6 mode active
interface GigabitEthernet1/0/24
description [----[ Uplink to N7K2 - E9/10 ]----]
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
switchport mode trunk
channel-group 6 mode active
interface GigabitEthernet 2/0/1
description [----[ Uplink to N7K1 - E10/10]----]
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
switchport mode trunk
channel-group 6 mode active
interface GigabitEthernet2/0/24
description [----[ Uplink to N7K2 - E10/10]----]
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
switchport mode trunk
channel-group 6 mode active

Once the interfaces are assigned to the channel-group, we
can configure the etherchannel on the Cisco 3750s. Notice
that there is no vPC info nor anything else that says this
is connected to two switches.
interface Port-channel6
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
switchport mode trunk


Now, on the Nexus side we need to do some configurations
as well. Both Nexus switches are also configured the same,
so there are no differences in the switch configs.
interface Ethernet9/10
description [----[ StackSwitch6-1 ]----]
switchport
switchport mode trunk
channel-group 6 mode active
no shutdown

interface Ethernet10/10
description [----[ StackSwitch6-1 ]----]
switchport
switchport mode trunk
channel-group 6 mode active
no shutdown

Now, when it comes to configuring the etherchannel on the Nexus
switches, is is configured the same except for the addition of
a vPC identifier. I recommend using the same number that you used
for the port-channel for easy identification, but that is up to you.
interface port-channel6
description [----[ LACP EtherChannel for StackSwitch6 ]----]
switchport
switchport mode trunk
vpc 6

Once you have it configured on the Nexus, make sure it is up and
in the vPC correctly.

N7K1# sh int port-channel 6
port-channel6 is up
vPC Status: Up, vPC number: 6
Hardware: Port-Channel, address: 5475.d04f.1165 (bia 5475.d04f.1165)
Description: [----[ LACP EtherChannel for RackSwitch6 ]----]
Members in this channel: Eth9/10, Eth10/10
N7K1#

Once you have confirmed that all is working correctly, you can
check out the StackSwitch spanning tree information:

StackSwitch06#sh spanning-tree interface port-channel 6
Vlan Role Sts Cost Prio.Nbr Type
---------------- ---- --- --------- -------- -------------------------
-------
VLAN0001 Root FWD 3 128.656 P2p
VLAN0002 Root FWD 3 128.656 P2p
VLAN0003 Root FWD 3 128.656 P2p
VLAN0004 Root FWD 3 128.656 P2p
VLAN0005 Root FWD 3 128.656 P2p
StackSwitch06#

You will see that even though you are connected to two switches,
the port-channel is seen as a single spanning-tree
path to the root.

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