ONTAP Hardware
ONTAP Hardware
Port Distribution Active
Node IfGrp Function MAC Address Ports Ports
-------- ---------- ------------ ----------------- ------- -------------------
netappind001-n1
a1a ip ################### full e0c, e0d
a1c ip ################### full e0e, e0f
netappind001-n2
a2a ip ################### full e0c, e0d
a2c ip ################### full e0e, e0f
We have seleceted 'Distribution Function' as 'IP' for our two port ifgrp and now observing issue with outgoing traffic - one of the port in ifgrp is heavily utilised while the other is less utilised (difference is huge)
Since we have all 1 GB ports so need to utilise both the ports in order to get fair outgoing bandwidth.
Now the problem is that this cluster is in production - is there anyway we can change the Distribution Function to port without / min downtime.
Attached logs below to show that e0d port in ifgrp a1a is more utilised than e0c
-- interface a1a-4 (12 days, 20 hours, 18 minutes, 10 seconds) --
RECEIVE
Total frames: 310m | Total bytes: 22370m | Multi/broadcast: 2553k
TRANSMIT
Total frames: 2027m | Total bytes: 3049g | Multi/broadcast: 161
Queue overflows: 0
LINK INFO
Linkup Events: 2 | Allocs Failed: 0
DEVICE
Vlan ID: 4 | Phy Iface: a1a
-- interface e0c (12 days, 20 hours, 18 minutes, 10 seconds) --
TRANSMIT
Frames/second: 4 | Bytes/second: 632 | Errors/minute: 0
Discards/minute: 0 | Total frames: 5855k | Total bytes: 61442m
Total errors: 0 | Total discards: 0 | Multi/broadcast: 16692
Queue overflows: 0 | No buffers: 0 | Transmit error: 0
Frame Dropped: 0 | Pause frame: 0 | Stray Cluster Pk: 0
-- interface e0d (12 days, 20 hours, 18 minutes, 10 seconds) --
TRANSMIT
Frames/second: 22 | Bytes/second: 68014 | Errors/minute: 0
Discards/minute: 0 | Total frames: 84223k | Total bytes: 1136g
Total errors: 0 | Total discards: 0 | Multi/broadcast: 56431
Queue overflows: 0 | No buffers: 0 | Transmit error: 0
Frame Dropped: 0 | Pause frame: 0 | Stray Cluster Pk: 0
Solved! See The Solution
Hello, as I think you've already realised to change the distribution function is disruptive in that you must delete the interface group.
However, it should be possible to achieve this, albeit a manual LIF failover will incur a 15 second disruption:
Just a caution from Ethernet Storage Design Considerations and Best Practices for Clustered Data ONTAP Configurations - http://www.netapp.com/us/media/tr-4182.pdf page 13:
Port. Use this distribution method for optimal load-balancing results. However, it doesn’t lend itself as well to troubleshooting, because the TCP/UDP port of a packet is also used to determine the physical port that is used to send a particular packet. It has also been reported that switches operating in particular modes (mapping MAC/IP/port) might exhibit lower than expected performance in this mode.
...If you use “port” on the IFGRP configuration on the cluster, make sure that the switch port on the Cisco, Juniper, Brocade, or other device is also configured in the same way
Obviously this is Production so test in your environment first, however hope you find this useful.
Cheers,
Grant.
Hello, as I think you've already realised to change the distribution function is disruptive in that you must delete the interface group.
However, it should be possible to achieve this, albeit a manual LIF failover will incur a 15 second disruption:
Just a caution from Ethernet Storage Design Considerations and Best Practices for Clustered Data ONTAP Configurations - http://www.netapp.com/us/media/tr-4182.pdf page 13:
Port. Use this distribution method for optimal load-balancing results. However, it doesn’t lend itself as well to troubleshooting, because the TCP/UDP port of a packet is also used to determine the physical port that is used to send a particular packet. It has also been reported that switches operating in particular modes (mapping MAC/IP/port) might exhibit lower than expected performance in this mode.
...If you use “port” on the IFGRP configuration on the cluster, make sure that the switch port on the Cisco, Juniper, Brocade, or other device is also configured in the same way
Obviously this is Production so test in your environment first, however hope you find this useful.
Cheers,
Grant.