UCS Manager: Difference between revisions
| Line 572: | Line 572: | ||
1 19 Enabled Up License Ok 0 default fabric/lan/eth-link-prof-default |
1 19 Enabled Up License Ok 0 default fabric/lan/eth-link-prof-default |
||
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric # |
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric # |
||
== Another UCS Manager (and Fabric Interconnect) update == |
|||
I have acquired a pair of B200 M4 blades. And the FI (and UCS Manager) need upgrading to support them. Hopefully nothing breaks in the process. Hopefully... |
|||
Revision as of 00:05, 27 March 2026
There are a few pieces of Cisco UCS equipment in the data center:
- One UCS 5108 blade enclosure, accommodating up to 8 B200 server blades of various generations
- 2 UCS-FI-6248UP fabric interconnects, which sit between UCS servers or blade chassis and the rest of the network
- 1 UCS C220 M5 server
Cisco UCS Manager gets installed on the Fabric Interconnects and does Cisco proprietary magic things. Like powering on a single blade. This is way more complicated that it needs to be. So this document is being written to capture knowledge of installation, upgrades, and server management tasks.
How to get
Much (all?) of Cisco's UCS software is available directly without a support contract. But a customer account is required to download. Registration is free as in beer. I have had one since July 2021 and have not been troubled with Cisco spam or any sort of "are you a real person at a real company?" validation.
As this is written, UCS Infrastructure and UCS Manager Software is the place to get it. As I have some older, end-of-life, end-of-support fabric interconnects (62xx series) which are not supported on the current 6.0 release train, I have instead selected the 4.2(3p) version for download. This comes as a 1Gbyte-ish ucs-k9-bundle-infra.4.2.3p.A.bin file.
Untested Fabric Interconnect, what do we do?
5ish years ago (summer 2021), I acquired three of these 6248UP FIs. And I think I got one of them configured for use on the management network and updated to then-current software. I'm not sure which of the three that was. And I am sure I did no documentation at the time. So here we are with new notes.
Console and power are at the front?!?!
So, this is weird. Console and power connections are at the front side of the chassis. All of the connectivity is at the rear as it should be. There is sufficient room on the back for a couple of C14 power connectors and 2 more 8P8C modular connectors for management LAN and serial console. But they are at the front. So cabling is kinda sorta extra fun. sigh
Console serial cable is the usual Cisco modular pinout. Signal on pins 3 and 6. 9600 bps, 8-n-1 are the serial port settings. Nothing unusual there.
Mystery solved regarding the connections at front of the chassis. My FIs have 32 ports for traffic, but there is (well, was, back when this was a current product) a 16 port expansion module available. See https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/collateral/servers-unified-computing/ucs-6200-series-fabric-interconnects/data_sheet_c78-675245.html for some diagrams.
Basic Fabric Interconnect configuration
I might have lucked out on the first one I received, but it booted normally and started the interactive system setup dialog. It is all pretty basic. Set a password for the admin user and an IP address, netmask, IPv4 gateway address, and DNS server address for the management Ethernet interface (again, on the front). That's pretty much it.
After this is done, make sure the management Ethernet interface is connected to a switch on the correct VLAN and subnet. Then do all the things over an SSH connection. At least for version 2.1, the SSH server only knows about RSA host keys, so a modern OpenSSH client will need something like -o HostKeyAlgorithms=+ssh-rsa listed as a command line option.
Clock discipline is good
To set the time in the FI. Or just get it close. NTP will come. Eventually.
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope system ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system # scope services ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services # set clock Mar 22 2026 02 53 35 Sun Mar 22 02:53:35 UTC 2026 ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services #
And now for the NTP:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope system
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system # scope services
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services # create ntp-server 172.16.10.2
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services # create ntp-server 172.16.10.3
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services # show ntp
NTP Servers:
Name: 172.16.10.2
Name: 172.16.10.3
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /system/services #
Software upgrade time!
Again, on the first one I have tried, let's log in as admin and see what's running:
Cisco UCS 6200 Series Fabric Interconnect
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A login: admin Password: Cisco Nexus Operating System (NX-OS) Software TAC support: http://www.cisco.com/tac Copyright (c) 2009, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. The copyrights to certain works contained in this software are owned by other third parties and used and distributed under license. Certain components of this software are licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2.0 or the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) Version 2.1. A copy of each such license is available at http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.php and http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show version System version: 2.2(1c) ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
And, more verbosely (for reasons that are beyond me, "brief" mode shows more output?):
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show version brief System version: 2.2(1c) Package-Vers: 2.2(1c)A ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
So that's really very super dooper old. I downloaded a copy of the 4.1(3i) code in August 2022. Off do so some reading to see if I can skip all the in-between versions.
Did not find anything authoritative in the release notes (but I only looked very briefly.) So, we can do it stepwise. Hopefully. Process looks something like this:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope firmware
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware # download image tftp://172.17.0.18/ucs-k9-bundle-infra.2.2.8m.A.bin
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware # show download-task
Download task:
File Name Protocol Server Userid State
--------- -------- --------------- --------------- -----
ucs-k9-bundle-infra.2.2.8m.A.bin
Tftp 172.17.0.18 Downloaded
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware #
Yes, you read that right. I delivered the software image to the FI over TFTP. SSH (scp and sftp) are supported protocols, but could not connect to an OpenSSH server on Debian 13. This might be better with newer FI firmware, but for now, I already have a TFTP server handy for netbooting other machines in the environment.
And from here, the firmware bundle can actually be installed on the Fabric Interconnect like so:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope firmware
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware # scope auto-install
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install # install infra infra-vers 2.2(8m)A
This operation upgrades firmware on UCS Infrastructure Components
(UCS manager, Fabric Interconnects and IOMs). Do you want to proceed?
(yes/no):yes
Triggering Install-Infra with:
Infrastructure Pack Version: 2.2(8m)A
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install # acknowledge primary fabric-interconnect reboot
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install # show fsm status expand
FSM Status:
Affected Object: sys/fw-system/fsm
Current FSM: Deploy
Status: In Progress
Completion Time:
Progress (%): 87
FSM Stage:
Order Stage Name Status Try
------ ---------------------------------------- ------------ ---
1 DeployWaitForDeploy Success 0
2 DeployResolveDistributableNames Skip 0
3 DeployResolveDistributable Skip 0
4 DeployResolveImages Skip 0
5 DeployActivateUCSM Success 0
6 DeployPollActivateOfUCSM In Progress 1
7 DeployUpdateIOM Pending 0
8 DeployPollUpdateOfIOM Pending 0
9 DeployActivateIOM Pending 0
10 DeployPollActivateOfIOM Pending 0
11 DeployActivateRemoteFI Pending 0
12 DeployPollActivateOfRemoteFI Pending 0
13 DeployWaitForUserAck Pending 0
14 DeployActivateLocalFI Pending 0
15 DeployPollActivateOfLocalFI Pending 0
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install # Connection to 172.16.10.176 closed.
Somewhere along the way, the SSH server hung up on me. But that seems like the sort of thing that should happen as the FI's OS is being upgraded. Progress can also be tracked on the serial console port like so:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope firmware
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware # scope auto-install
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install # show fsm status expand | no-more
FSM Status:
Affected Object: sys/fw-system/fsm
Current FSM: Deploy
Status: In Progress
Completion Time:
Progress (%): 98
FSM Stage:
Order Stage Name Status Try
------ ---------------------------------------- ------------ ---
1 DeployWaitForDeploy Success 0
2 DeployResolveDistributableNames Skip 0
3 DeployResolveDistributable Skip 0
4 DeployResolveImages Skip 0
5 DeployDownloadImages Skip 0
6 DeployCopyAllImagesToPeer Skip 0
7 DeployInternalBackup Success 0
8 DeployPollInternalBackup Success 2
9 DeployActivateUCSM Skip 0
10 DeployPollActivateOfUCSM Success 0
11 DeployUpdateIOM Success 0
12 DeployPollUpdateOfIOM Success 0
13 DeployActivateIOM Success 0
14 DeployPollActivateOfIOM Success 0
15 DeployActivateRemoteFI Skip 0
16 DeployPollActivateOfRemoteFI Skip 0
17 DeployWaitForUserAck Skip 0
18 DeployPollWaitForUserAck Success 0
19 DeployActivateLocalFI Success 0
20 DeployPollActivateOfLocalFI In Progress 2
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /firmware/auto-install #
At some point, the FI will reboot itself.
Confirm new code is running like so:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show version System version: 2.2(8m) ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show version brief System version: 2.2(8m) Package-Vers: 2.2(8m)A ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
STOP! Don't forget the other UCS things!
Um, yeah. So there is this UCS 5108 blade chassis in the data center, too. No idea what its firmware versions are. But they are sure to also need firmware updates. And it would be distressing if those components were left in a state where they are unusable because the FIs are so much newer than the blade enclosure and its servers. So I guess we need to see about warming the ZIP code 5degC by attaching the blade chassis to the mains power and see what we can see.
Correct cabling for single FI to UCS 5108
According to https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/unified_computing/ucs/hw/chassis-install-guide/ucs5108_install/ucs5108_install_chapter_010.html, a single Fabric Interconnect can only be connected to a single Fabric Extender on a UCS chassis. So for now, enable 6248UP ports 1 and 3, and cable to ports 1 and 2 on the left side (as seen from the rear) Fabric Extender.
SFPs go into the FI and the UCS 5108 FEXes
Pretty self explanatory, right. Find Cisco 10GbE SR SFP+ modules, insert into port one on each of the FEXes, insert into ports 1 and 3 on the FI. Attach nice aqua colored cable. And don't panic as the lights don't come on.
Telling the FI to discover the blade chassis
This is way more complicated that it needs to be. I'm sure it's totally amazing if you have racks full of Cisco UCS hardware. But I have just the one blade chassis and the one C series server and the 2 fabric interconnects. And the FI management software is all lovely out of date Java stuff. So fumbling around the CLI, hoping to find my way out of the darkness here.
The process for this seems to be something like:
- Configure FI Ethernet ports as server ports
- Ensure the attached chassis has been discovered and acknowledge any faults
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope eth-server
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server # show fabric a detail
Fabric:
Id: A
Current Task:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server # scope fabric a
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric # create interface 1 1
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface* # enable
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface* # show interface detail
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface # exit
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric # create interface 1 3
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface* # enable
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric/interface # exit
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server/fabric # exit
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server # show interface
Interface:
Fabric Slot Port Admin State Oper State State Reason Chassis Lic State Grace Prd
------- ----- ----- ------------ ------------ ------------------------------- -------- -------------------- ---------
A 1 1 Enabled Up 1 License Ok 0
A 1 3 Enabled Up 1 License Ok 0
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-server # exit
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show chassis inventory
Chassis PID Vendor Serial (SN) HW Revision
---------- --------------- ----------------- ----------- -----------
1 N20-C6508 Cisco Systems Inc FOX1808GLJG 0
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
Success! Serial number reported in the UCS Manager matches the one I found on the label.
So how do I power on a server?
Still fumbling through here. But: servers (blade servers for sure, not sure about rack servers) belong to UCS "Organizations." These organizations are managed by the UCS Manager, too. And since an organization owns a server (blade or otherwise) the organization can power servers on and off.
What orgs exist?
This is what we get from a factory default UCS Manager:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show org
Organizations:
Name
----
/ (root)
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show org detail
Organizations:
Name: / (root)
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
Enter an org, see what we have for basic policies
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope org /
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show bladeserver-disc-policy
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show chassis-conn-policy
Chassis/FEX Connectivity Policy:
Chassis/FEX Id Chassis/FEX Name Fabric Id Link Aggregation Preference
-------------- ---------------- --------- ---------------------------
1 sys/chassis-1 A Global
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show chassis-disc-policy
Chassis/FEX Discovery Policy:
Description Qualifier Action Rebalance Link Aggregation Pref Multicast Hw Hash
----------- ---------- ----------------- ----------------- --------------------- -----------------
none 1 Link User Acknowledged None Disabled
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show chassis-disc-policy detail
Chassis/FEX Discovery Policy:
Description:
Qualifier: none
Action: 1 Link
Rebalance: User Acknowledged
Link Aggregation Pref: None
Multicast Hw Hash: Disabled
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show rackserver-disc-policy
Rack Server Discovery Policy:
Action Scrub Policy
----------------- ------------
Immediate
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show rackserver-disc-policy detail
Rack Server Discovery Policy:
Action: Immediate
Scrub Policy:
Description:
Current Task:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show rackserver-mgmt-policy
Rack Server Management Policy:
Action
------
Auto Acknowledged
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # show rackserver-mgmt-policy detail
Rack Server Management Policy:
Action: Auto Acknowledged
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org #
Create a profile and add a (blade) server to it
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show chassis inventory 1
Chassis PID Vendor Serial (SN) HW Revision
---------- --------------- ----------------- ----------- -----------
1 N20-C6508 Cisco Systems Inc FOX1808GLJG 0
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show chassis inventory 1 expand
Chassis 1:
Servers:
Server 1/1:
Equipped Product Name: Cisco UCS B200 M3
Equipped PID: UCSB-B200-M3
Equipped VID: V03
Equipped Serial (SN): FCH162871NA
Slot Status: Equipped
Acknowledged Product Name: Cisco UCS B200 M3
Acknowledged PID: UCSB-B200-M3
Acknowledged VID: V03
Acknowledged Serial (SN): FCH162871NA
Acknowledged Memory (MB): 196608
Acknowledged Effective Memory (MB): 196608
Acknowledged Cores: 0
Acknowledged Adapters: 2
Server 1/2:
Equipped Product Name: Cisco UCS B200 M3
Equipped PID: UCSB-B200-M3
Equipped VID: V06
Equipped Serial (SN): FCH1811JELC
Slot Status: Equipped
Acknowledged Product Name: Cisco UCS B200 M3
[...]
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# top
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope org /
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # create service-profile
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # create service-profile UCS_B200_M3_FCH162871NA
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile* # associate server 1/1
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile #
I can power on now?
Well, no. Maybe it should have worked. But for this blade, there was a Power On Self Test (POST) failure. Let's dig in. To power on the server included in the service profile, do this:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope org / ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # scope service-profile UCS_B200_M3_FCH162871NA ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile # power up ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile* # commit-buffer ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile # top ucs-fi-6248up-0-A #
And let's have a look at its status:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope server 1/1
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show
Server:
Slot Overall Status Service Profile Availability
------- --------------------- -------------------- ------------
1 Compute Failed Unavailable
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show detail
Server:
Slot: 1
Name:
User Label:
Overall Status: Compute Failed
Oper Qualifier: Compute Post Failure
Service Profile:
Association: None
Availability: Unavailable
Discovery: Failed
Conn Path: A
Conn Status: A
Managing Instance: A
Admin Power: Policy
Oper Power: Off
Admin State: In Service
Product Name: Cisco UCS B200 M3
PID: UCSB-B200-M3
VID: V03
Vendor: Cisco Systems Inc
Serial (SN): FCH162871NA
HW Revision: 0
Mfg Date: 2012-07-26T00:00:00.000
Part Number: 73-13217-08
Memory (MB): 196608
Effective Memory (MB): 196608
Operating Memory Speed (MHz): 1333
Operating Memory Voltage: Regular Voltage
Cores: 0
Num Of Cores Enabled: 0
Adapters: 2
Eth Host Interfaces: 0
FC Host Interfaces: 0
Burned-In UUID: 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
Dynamic UUID: 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
Current Task 1: Checking hardware configuration server 1/1(FSM-STAGE:sam:dme:ComputeBladeDiscover:Sanitize)
Current Task 2:
Current Task 3:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show post
POST:
Global ID Code Severity Affected Object Description
--------- --------- --------- -------------------------------- -----------
6215 POST-6215 Critical sys/chassis-1/blade-1 Board Programmable version not valid for Processor Type
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show post detail
POST:
Global ID: 6215
Code: POST-6215
Local ID: 1536
Severity: Critical
Affected Object: sys/chassis-1/blade-1
Description: Board Programmable version not valid for Processor Type
Type: server: Cisco Systems Inc UCSB-B200-M3
Recoverable: Non Recoverable
Recovery Action: Refer the CPU upgrade guide.
Timestamp: 2026-03-22T16:17:06.001
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server #
Making an inferences from "Board Programmable version not valid for Processor Type" I am thinking that it does not like the Xeon E5-2650v2 I installed. Now to find a not v2 E5-26xx CPU and see if that works any better. I found a not obviously damaged E5-2609 in storage (er, piles in the garage) and installed that in the blade. Let's see what we have now:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope org /
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org # scope service-profile UCS_B200_M3_FCH162871NA
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile # power up
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /org/service-profile # top
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope server 1/1
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show inventory
Server 1/1:
Name:
User Label:
Equipped PID: UCSB-B200-M3
Equipped VID: V03
Equipped Serial (SN): FCH162871NA
Slot Status: Equipped
Acknowledged Product Name: Cisco UCS B200 M3
Acknowledged PID: UCSB-B200-M3
Acknowledged VID: V03
Acknowledged Serial (SN): FCH162871NA
Acknowledged Memory (MB): 16384
Acknowledged Effective Memory (MB): 16384
Acknowledged Cores: 4
Acknowledged Adapters: 2
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # top
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
Great Success! The Xeon E5-2609 is a 4 core CPU. And there are 4x 4GiByte memory DIMMs installed. So inventory looks good. Huzzah! (And what an utter pain.)
Server and Infrastructure issues
So, we just saw the first one of these above. The B200 M3 blades do not like Xeon E5-26xx v2 processors. At least with the firmware installed at present. Let's figure that one out first. https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/unified_computing/ucs/hw/blade-servers/B200M3.html#reference_CD3077C1064743F99C0F9A935778BC2F has a little table listing minimum versions for various components to get the Xeon E5-2600 v2 CPUs to run. These are the required versions for E5-26xx V2 CPUs:
| Software or Firmware | Minimum Version |
|---|---|
| Server CIMC | 2.1(3) |
| Server BIOS | 2.1(3) |
| Cisco UCS Manager | 2.1(3) |
| Board controller firmware | 8.0 |
Let's see if we can see what we are running in one of the blades I have and the UCS Manager itself:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope chassis 1
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis # scope server 1/1
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show firmware cimc
Server Running-Vers Package-Vers Update-Status Activate-Status
------- --------------- --------------- --------------- ---------------
1/1 3.1(23c) Ready Ready
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show firmware bios
Server 1/1:
BIOS:
Running-Vers: B200M3.2.2.6d.0.062220160055
Package-Vers:
Update-Status: Ready
Activate-Status: Ready
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # show firmware boardcontroller
Management Controller:
Server Running-Vers Package-Vers Activate-Status
------- --------------- --------------- ---------------
1/1 15.0 Ready
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /chassis/server # top
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# show version brief
System version: 2.2(8m)
Package-Vers: 2.2(8m)A
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A#
So that is odd. The requirements listed in Cisco's documentation for supporting Xeon E5-26xx v2 CPUs are met. But the blade complains about "Board Programmable version not valid for Processor Type". Maybe the blade server's CIMC could tell us more?
CIMC networking
This is going to get us started with attaching the Fabric Interconnect(s) to the rest of the network. Hopefully things go mostly OK. The network at large is all Brocade and Mellanox gear. But here's the strategy statement:
- Create a Link Aggregation Group interface on the appropriate top-of-rack Brocade ICX switches. Pipe all VLANs we care about (management and generic server, 10 and 1000) to that LAG.
- Configure the Fabric Interconnect with some uplink ports to connect to the Brocade LAG interfaces.
- Configure some VLANs on the FI uplink ports ???
- Plumb the management VLAN to the blade servers' CIMC network.
Brocade config
Fairly simple, really. Add this to the switch's config (from elevated privileges prompt (enable mode) do configure terminal and save (write memory) when done.
lag rack-2-to-ucs-fi-6248up-0 dynamic id 3 ports ethernet 1/3/2 ethernet 2/3/2 primary-port 1/3/2 deploy
And to validate:
SSH@brocade-icx6610-48p-rack-2#show lag rack-2-to-ucs-fi-6248up-0
Total number of LAGs: 3
Total number of deployed LAGs: 3
Total number of trunks created:3 (117 available)
LACP System Priority / ID: 1 / 748e.f8dd.6228
LACP Long timeout: 120, default: 120
LACP Short timeout: 3, default: 3
=== LAG "rack-2-to-ucs-fi-6248up-0" ID 3 (dynamic Deployed) ===
LAG Configuration:
Ports: e 1/3/2 e 2/3/2
Port Count: 2
Primary Port: 1/3/2
Trunk Type: hash-based
LACP Key: 20003
Deployment: HW Trunk ID 3
Port Link State Dupl Speed Trunk Tag Pvid Pri MAC Name
1/3/2 Down None None None 3 Yes N/A 0 748e.f8dd.6264
2/3/2 Down None None None 3 Yes N/A 0 748e.f8dd.6264
Port [Sys P] [Port P] [ Key ] [Act][Tio][Agg][Syn][Col][Dis][Def][Exp][Ope]
1/3/2 1 1 20003 Yes S Agg Syn No No Def No Dwn
2/3/2 1 1 20003 Yes S Agg Syn No No Def No Dwn
Partner Info and PDU Statistics
Port Partner Partner LACP LACP
System ID Key Rx Count Tx Count
1/3/2 1-0000.0000.0000 129 0 0
2/3/2 1-0000.0000.0000 385 0 0
SSH@brocade-icx6610-48p-rack-2#
So that was not terrible.
UCS Fabric Interconnect uplink ports
Need to make some. Kinda like this:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A# scope eth-uplink
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink # show fabric a
Fabric:
Id
--
A
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink # show fabric a detail
Fabric:
Id: A
Current Task 1:
Current Task 2:
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink # show fabric a expand
Fabric:
Id: A
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink # scope fabric a
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric # create interface 1 17
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric/interface* # enable
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric/interface* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric/interface # up
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric # create interface 1 19
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric/interface* # enable
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric/interface* # commit-buffer
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric/interface # exit
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric # show interface
Interface:
Slot Id Port Id Admin State Oper State Lic State Grace Period State Reason Ethernet Link Profile name Oper Ethernet Link Profile name
---------- ---------- ----------- ---------------- -------------------- --------------- ------------ -------------------------- -------------------------------
1 17 Enabled Up License Ok 0 default fabric/lan/eth-link-prof-default
1 19 Enabled Up License Ok 0 default fabric/lan/eth-link-prof-default
ucs-fi-6248up-0-A /eth-uplink/fabric #
Another UCS Manager (and Fabric Interconnect) update
I have acquired a pair of B200 M4 blades. And the FI (and UCS Manager) need upgrading to support them. Hopefully nothing breaks in the process. Hopefully...