You need a NIC that supports it. We are currently using the Broadcom
Corporation BCM57840 NetXtreme II 10 Gigabit Ethernet adapter. However,
multiple vendors sell a converged network adapter that should work.
You’ll also need to verify that your switch supports FCoE. This is where you’ll
On 18/10/15 16:44, Nir Soffer wrote:
I still don't understand the problem you are trying to solve.
Can you explain the network topology?
- Do you have FC storage server, switch?
- How many nodes to do you have with FC HBA?
Do you want to add nodes without FC HBA, and you want to consume
the
We use FCoE in our setup. All the configs are in /etc/fcoe/ and fcoeadm is part
of the ovirt-node iso. So this should work the same as setting up FCoE on
CentOS or RHEL.
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Storage_Administration_Guide/fcoe-config.html
On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 1:31 PM, Kapetanakis Giannis
wrote:
> On 16/10/15 01:01, Nir Soffer wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> >
>> > I thought something like this might work:
>> >
>> > node[1]: FC - ISCSI <-> node[2]: ISCSI - FC
>>
>> I dont follow - how do you want to share your fc
On 16/10/15 01:01, Nir Soffer wrote:
>
> I thought something like this might work:
>
> node[1]: FC - ISCSI <-> node[2]: ISCSI - FC
I dont follow - how do you want to share your fc storage over iscsi?
And what are these nodes? Storage nodes? Hypervisors?
Nir
The initial idea was to share
בתאריך 14 באוק׳ 2015 3:11 אחה״צ, "Kapetanakis Giannis" <
bil...@edu.physics.uoc.gr> כתב:
>
> Hi,
>
> Not sure if this is the right place to ask but maybe someone can provide
directions for my problem.
>
> I have a full FC setup with FC switch and FC HBAs on Linux (Centos) to
access my storage.
>
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