Planning for a direct-attached iSCSI configuration
A direct-attached configuration dedicates entire port bandwidth to be used for a specific connection. Planning must account for the volume of expected traffic before you decide how many ports are used in a direct-attached configuration. Direct attached connections are supported on the same speed at both ends.
The system offers multiple options in deciding how to create a direct-attached configuration. Bandwidth requirements for a direct-attached configuration make it important to determine the volume of expected traffic in deciding the number of ports. Ensure you have accounted for sufficient bandwidth, in particular node to node as the bandwidth between nodes determines write speed for replicated workloads.
- Cache replication for host writes can occur without any bandwidth bottleneck
- All possible intra-node traffic can be carried without any bandwidth bottleneck.
- iSCSI direct attachment to host systems.
The system allows direct attachment connectivity between its iSCSI ports and the host ports. Host systems can be connected to 10 Gbps, 25 Gbps, or 100 Gbps Ethernet ports on the system. No special configuration is needed for host systems that are using this configuration.
- iSCSI direct attachment between nodes in a system.
Direct connection of the system Ethernet ports without using an Ethernet switch is supported. Such direct connections between the system nodes might be useful in small configurations where no switch exists. It can also be used to connect nodes in the same I/O group to provide a dedicated connection for mirroring the fast write cache data. Ensure that sufficient bandwidth is provisioned between nodes to accommodate all the intra-node traffic.
For more information about host compatibility, see IBM System Storage Interoperation Center (SSIC).
- AIX® host attach is generally not supported with direct-attached iSCSI configuration and requires SCORE approvals for enabling support.
- iSCSI direct-attached over policy-based high availability configuration is generally not supported and requires SCORE approvals.
- For each connection, the host interfaces must be on different subnets. For instance, two interfaces from the same host must be on different subnets.