| Title: | FDDI - The Next Generation |
| Moderator: | NETCAD::STEFANI |
| Created: | Thu Apr 27 1989 |
| Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 2259 |
| Total number of notes: | 8590 |
Hi, At Digital Brussels we have the following LAN setup : - GigaSwitch/FDDI. - DEChub 900 with DECswitch 900EF modules connected in tree to the GS, on each floor of each building on our campus. - Furthermore we have an FDDI backbone ring connecting all the buildings from before the introduction of the GigaSwitch. On this ring a number of FDDI concentrators as well as the Gigaswitch are connected.. In this setup the GigaSwitch is a single point of failure for the entire LAN. I wanted to use the above "old" FDDI backbone ring as a failover in case the GigaSwitch fails. 1 : By connecting the M port of the 900EF to the concentrator and the S port of the 900EF to the GigaSiwtch. Of course an M-M connection wan't work with the concentrator. In this setup the 900EF port are configure M/S in front. Can the concentrator be configured as to accept M-M connections as does the GS ? 2: When configuring the 900EF as A/B port in front I got green lights yet I'm not quite sure if this is a valid setup nor how it works: 900EF A - M of concentrator 900EF B - M (or is it S ?) of Gigaswitch Remember the concentrator and the GigaSwitch already sit on the same FDDI ring as well. Could someone comment on this or give me any other suggestion how I can build in some redundancy without having to buy a second GS/FDDI so I can save some money for DEC. Thanks In advance, Jurgen Caeyman Network Manager Digital Brussels [Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2246.1 | NPSS::MDLYONS | Michael D. Lyons DTN 226-6943 | Thu Apr 10 1997 14:34 | 21 | |
There is a great deal of discussion in the NPSS::GIGASWITCH notes
conference regarding redundant configurations. Most of it can be found
by looking under the keyword failover-configurations.
The classic topology which most GIGAswitch/FDDI customers use is
dual homing with two GIGAswitch/FDDI systems. The active "B"
connections go to one GIGAswitch/FDDI system, the standby "A"
connections go to the other GIGAswitch/FDDI system. The two
GIGAswitch/FDDI systems are interconnected, usually with a hunt group.
If you don't have the money for two GIGAswitch/FDDI systems, then
you can dual home to a single ring using concentrators. The active "B"
connections go to the GIGAswitch/FDDI system, and the standby "A"
connections would go to the concentrators.
Of course you will have a substantial drop in throughput after a
failure.
MDL
P.S. M-M is about the only completely illegal FDDI configuration.
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