Jan 23, 2015

Cisco - UCS - Design Best Practices

1. Address Pools: best practices
1.1 UUID Pools
  • UUID: global ID that is unique to a given server
    • Composed of Prefix and Suffix
    • Best practice: don‟t modify the prefix
  • Recommendations:
    • Use root “default” pool as the global default pool for all Service Profiles
    • Populate the default pool with a block of 512 IDs
    • Don‟t alter original Prefix, this is unique to this UCS
    • Optional: choose a “Domain ID” for this UCS - used later in other ID pools
1.2 MAC Address Pools
  • Prefer pools to burnt-in values whenever possible
    • -Pools let you control the exact allocation following your naming convention
    • -Makes it easy to identify a given blade or OS type on switches
  • On the M81KR adapter (aka “Palo”) this is a must
    • -M81KR can instantiate N interfaces  there are no burnt-in addresses
  • Best practice
    • -MAC pools: create pools that are multiple of 64
    • -Optionally encode Domain/Site ID and OS Type
 1.3 World Wide Name Pools
  • Using pools lets you communicate WWNs to SAN team ahead of deployment
    • -pre-provision LUNs for boot-from-SAN
    • -proactively perform zoning and LUN masking configuration
  • One blade uses one Node WWN and as many Port WWN as there are vHBAs
  • Node pool best practice: create one large pool that‟s a multiple of 16
    • -Create the pool at the Root organization (you can use the default pool)
    • -Zoning and masking does not use Node WWN
  • Ensure node pools and port pools do not overlap
1.4 Port WWN Pools
  • Always create pools that are multiple of 16 and contain less than 128 entries
    • -This ensures vHBA0 (SAN A) and vHBA1 (SAN B) have the same low-order byte
  • Counter-example using 233-entries pools
  • Much better for both vHBAs to have the same low-order byte and a unique SAN Fabric identifier
    • -Presence of “0A” or “0B” in the port WWN indicates SAN Fabric



2. Recommended Service Profile Designs
  • Question: “how many vHBAs and vNICs should I assign to my Windows profile? How about ESXi?”
    • -If you don‟t have a Cisco M81KR adapter, the answer is simple: 2 plus 2!
    • -We‟re going to focus on M81KR use cases
  • For bare-metal deployments: the answer is “it depends”
    • -Consult the application owner(s)
    • -Empirical observation: typically 4 to 6 vNICs; 0 to 2 vHBas
  • For ESXi: most of the times 8 vNICs and 2 vHBAs
    • -Details in the next slides
  • For Hyper-V: most of the times 6 vNICs and 2 vHBAs
    • -Details in the next slides
3. Documents

Best Practices Hints and Tips from the field

UCS SAN Deployment Models and Best Practices




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