Blade ICE Switch BMD00098 User Manual

BLADEOS  
Release Notes  
1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module for IBM BladeCenter  
Version 5.1  
®
Part Number: BMD00098, December 2009  
2350 Mission College Blvd.  
Suite 600  
Santa Clara, CA 95054  
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Release Notes  
The 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module (GbESM) is one of up to four GbESMs that can be  
installed in the IBM BladeCenter chassis.  
These release notes provide the latest information regarding BLADEOS 5.1 for the 1/10Gb Uplink  
Ethernet Switch Module. This supplement modifies information found in the complete  
documentation:  
BLADEOS 5.1 Application Guide for the 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module for IBM  
BladeCenter  
BLADEOS 5.1 Command Reference for the 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module for IBM  
BladeCenter  
BLADEOS 5.1 ISCLI Reference for the 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module for IBM  
BladeCenter  
BLADEOS 5.1 BBI Quick Guide for the 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module for IBM  
BladeCenter  
1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module for IBM BladeCenter, Installation Guide  
The publications listed above are available from the IBM support website:  
Please keep these release notes with your product manuals.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Hardware Support  
BLADEOS 5.1 software is supported only on the 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module  
(Figure 1) for IBM BladeCenter. The GbESM is a high performance Layer 2-3 embedded network  
switch that features tight integration with IBM BladeCenter management modules.  
Figure 1 1/10Gb Uplink ESM Faceplate  
1
2
SFP+ slots  
10Gb Ethernet  
RS-232  
console port  
3
4
6
7
RJ45 ports  
1Gb Ethernet  
9
The GbESM has the following port capacities:  
Three external 10Gb SFP+ slots  
Six external 1Gb Ethernet ports (RJ45)  
One RS-232 serial console port  
Two 100Mb internal management ports  
Fourteen 1000Mb Ethernet internal ports  
4
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
The GbESM contains three 10 Gigabit Small Form-factor, Pluggable (SFP+) slots. The 10Gb SFP+  
slots can accept 1Gb copper transceivers, 10Gb optical transceivers, or Direct Attach Cables  
(DAC).  
Note – If a DAC is not programmed to meet MSA specifications (including length identifier), the  
switch disables the port and generates a syslog message indicating that the DAC is not approved.  
The GbESM does not disable the SFP+ ports when using MSA-compliant DAC cables. For best  
results, the following cables have been qualified to work with the switch:  
Table 1 Recommended SFP+ transceiver  
Part number  
Description  
BN-SP-CBL-1M SFP+ Copper Direct Attach Cable - 1 meter  
BN-SP-CBL-3M SFP+ Copper Direct Attach Cable - 3 meters  
BN-SP-CBL-7M SFP+ Copper Direct Attach Cable - 7 meters  
BN-SP-CBL-10M SFP+ Copper Direct Attach Cable - 10 meters  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Updating the Switch Software Image  
The switch software image is the executable code running on the GbESM. A version of the image  
ships with the switch, and comes pre-installed on the device. As new versions of the image are  
released, you can upgrade the software running on your switch. To get the latest version of software  
available for your GbESM, go to:  
From the BLADEOS CLI, use the /boot/cur command to determine the current software version.  
The typical upgrade process for the software image consists of the following steps:  
Place the new image onto a FTP or TFTP server on your network, or on a local computer.  
Transfer the new image to your switch.  
Select the new software image to be loaded into switch memory the next time the switch is reset.  
Loading New Software to Your Switch  
The switch can store up to two different software images, called image1 and image2, as well as  
boot software, called boot. When you load new software, you must specify where it should be  
placed: either into image1, image2, or boot.  
For example, if your active image is currently loaded into image1, you would probably load the  
new image software into image2. This lets you test the new software and reload the original active  
image (stored in image1), if needed.  
To download a new software image to your switch, you will need the following:  
The image and boot software loaded on a FTP or TFTP server on your network  
Boot file:  
GbESM-1-10U-5.1.1.0_Boot.img  
Image file: GbESM-1-10U-5.1.1.0_OS.img  
Note – Be sure to download both the new boot file and the new image file.  
The hostname or IP address of the FTP or TFTP server  
The name of the new software image or boot file  
Note – The DNS parameters must be configured if specifying hostnames.  
When the above requirements are met, use one of the following procedures to download the new  
software to your switch. You can use the BLADEOS CLI, the ISCLI, or the BBI to download and  
activate new software.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Using the BLADEOS CLI  
1. At the Boot Options# prompt, enter:  
Boot Options# gtimg  
2. Enter the name of the switch software to be replaced:  
Enter name of switch software image to be replaced  
["image1"/"image2"/"boot"]: <image>  
3. Enter the hostname or IP address of the FTP or TFTP server.  
Enter hostname or IP address of FTP/TFTP server: <hostname or IP address>  
4. Enter the name of the new software file on the server.  
Enter name of file on FTP/TFTP server: <filename>  
The exact form of the name will vary by server. However, the file location is normally relative to the  
FTP or TFTP directory (usually /tftpboot).  
5. Enter your username for the server, if applicable.  
Enter username for FTP server or hit return for  
TFTP server: {<username>|<Enter>}  
6. The system prompts you to confirm your request.  
Once confirmed, the software will load into the switch.  
7. When loading is complete, enter the following command at the Boot Options# prompt:  
Boot Options# image  
8. The system informs you of which software image (image1 or image2) is currently set to be  
loaded at the next reset, and prompts you to enter a new choice:  
Currently set to use switch software "image1" on next reset.  
Specify new image to use on next reset ["image1"/"image2"]:  
Specify the image that contains the newly loaded software.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Using the ISCLI  
1. In Privileged EXEC mode, enter the following command:  
Router# copy {tftp|ftp} {image1|image2|boot-image}  
2. Enter the hostname or IP address of the FTP or TFTP server.  
Address or name of remote host: <name or IP address>  
3. Enter the name of the new software file on the server.  
Source file name: <filename>  
The exact form of the name will vary by server. However, the file location is normally relative to the  
FTP or TFTP directory (usually tftpboot).  
4. Enter your username and password for the server, if applicable.  
User name: {<username>|<Enter>}  
5. The system prompts you to confirm your request.  
Once confirmed, the software will load into the switch.  
6. When loading is complete, use the following command in Global Configuration mode to select  
which software image (image1 or image2) you want to run in switch memory for the next  
reboot:  
Router(config)# boot image {image1|image2}  
The system will then verify which image is set to be loaded at the next reset:  
Next boot will use switch software image1 instead of image2.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Using the BBI  
You can use the Browser-Based Interface to load software onto the GbESM. The software image to  
load can reside in one of the following locations:  
FTP server  
TFTP server  
Local computer  
After you log onto the BBI, perform the following steps to load a software image:  
1. Click the Configure context tab in the toolbar.  
2. In the Navigation Window, select System > Config/Image Control.  
The Switch Image and Configuration Management page appears.  
3. If you are loading software from your computer (HTTP client), skip this step and go to the next.  
Otherwise, if you are loading software from a FTP/TFTP server, enter the server’s information in  
the FTP/TFTP Settings section.  
4. In the Image Settings section, select the image version you want to replace (Image for Transfer).  
If you are loading software from a FTP/TFTP server, enter the file name and click Get Image.  
If you are loading software from your computer, click Browse.  
In the File Upload Dialog, select the file and click OK. Then click Download via Browser.  
Once the image has loaded, the page refreshes to show the new software.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
New and Updated Features  
BLADEOS 5.1 for 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module (GbESM) has been updated to include  
new and enhanced features in support of server and peer switch discovery, as well as failure  
detection at the link layer. In addition, there are enhancements to existing implementations in the  
areas of dynamic routing protocols, configuration and reporting.  
The list of features below summarizes the updated features. For more detailed information about  
configuring GbESM features and capabilities, refer to the complete BLADEOS 5.1 documentation  
as listed on page 3.  
Remote Monitoring  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports Remote Monitoring (RMON).  
RMON allows network devices to exchange network monitoring data, gather cumulative and  
history statistics for Ethernet interfaces, and create and trigger alarms for user-defined events.  
An RMON management application can be used to access RMON MIB information on the GbESM,  
as described in RFC 1757. The switch supports RMON Group 1 (Statistics), Group 2 (History),  
Group 3 (Alarms), and Group 9 (Events).  
RMON properties are configured globally in the RMON menu, and enabled on a per-port basis in  
the Port menu:  
# /cfg/rmon  
(global RMON menu)  
-and-  
# /cfg/port <x>/rmon  
(per-port RMON menu)  
Link Layer Detection Protocol  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports 802.1AB Link Layer Detection Protocol (LLDP). Using LLDP, the  
GbESM advertises port and link information to other LLDP-capable devices and accepts their  
LLDP advertisements for the purpose of discovering pertinent information about remote ports.  
Switch port information and any remote device information is stored in a Managed Information  
Base (MIB). Higher-layer management tools may access the MIB to accumulate and report such  
information, and even to and discover configuration inconsistencies between systems on the same  
IEEE 802 LAN.  
The LLDP configuration menu is accessed using the following CLI command:  
# /cfg/l2/lldp  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Uni-Directional Link Discovery Protocol  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports the Uni-Directional Link Discovery (UDLD) protocol, compliant  
with RFC 5171. UDLD operates at Layer 2 in conjunction with existing IEEE 802.3 Layer 1 fault  
detection mechanisms. It is used between peer devices to detect and disable unidirectional Ethernet  
links caused, for instance, by mis-wired cable strands, interface malfunctions, or media converter  
faults.  
UDLD is configured on a per-port basis. It is disabled by default. The UDLD configuration menu is  
available using the following CLI command:  
# /cfg/port <x>/udld  
Operation/Administration/Maintenance Protocol  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports IEEE 802.3ah Operation, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM)  
protocol. OAM allows the switch to detect faults on physical port links. Using OAM, if the Local  
Information that a port sends does not match the Remote Information received, the link is  
determined to be in an anomalous condition and is automatically disabled.  
OAM is configured on a per-port basis. It is disabled by default. The OAM configuration menu is  
available using the following CLI command:  
# /cfg/port <x>/oam  
sFlow Monitoring  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports sFlow technology for monitoring traffic in data networks. The switch  
software includes an embedded sFlow agent which can be configured on a per-port basis to sample  
network traffic and provide continuous statistical report information to a central sFlow analyzer.  
sFlow features are disabled by default, but may be configured using the following menu:  
# /cfg/sys/sflow  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Internal Loopback Interface  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports up to five loopback interfaces.  
A loopback interface is an interface which is assigned an IP address, but is not associated with any  
particular physical port. The loopback interface is thus always available for higher layer protocols  
to use and advertise to the general network, regardless of which specific ports are in operation.  
Loopback interfaces can be of benefit in a number of protocols, improving access to a switch, as  
well as increasing its reliability, security, and scalability. In addition, loopback interfaces can add  
flexibility and simplify management, information gathering, and filtering.  
One example of this increased reliability is for OSPF to use a loopback interface in combination  
with host routes to advertise an interface route which will be available regardless of the status of  
individual physical links. This provides a higher probability that the routing traffic will be received  
and subsequently forwarded.  
Further reliability and performance could be provided by configuring parallel BGP paths to a  
loopback interface on a peer device, which would result in improved load sharing.  
Access and security can be improved through filtering. Incoming traffic can be filtered by rules that  
specify loopback interfaces as the only acceptable destination addresses.  
Information gathering and filtering as well as management can potentially be simplified if protocols  
such as SNMP use loopback interfaces for receiving and sending trap and log type information.  
The Loopback Interface configuration menu is accessed using the following CLI command:  
# /cfg/l3/loopif <loopback interface number (1-5)>  
Rate Limiting  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports traffic rate limits for packets broadcast, multicast, and unknown  
unicast packets. For each port, the maximum number of packets permitted per second for each  
packet type can be specified. The following commands have been added to the Port menu  
(/cfg/port <x>) to support rate limiting:  
brate <value>|dis  
mrate <value>|dis  
drate <value>|dis  
Broadcast limit, 0 to 262143 packets per second, or no limit.  
Multicast limit, 0 to 262143 packets per second, or no limit.  
Unknown unicast limit, 0 to 262143 packets per second, or no limit.  
12  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Hot Links  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports Hot Links. Hot Links provides basic link redundancy with fast  
recovery for network topologies that require Spanning Tree to be turned off.  
Hot Links allows up to five triggers, each of which consists of a pair of layer 2 interfaces that may  
contain either an individual port or trunk. One interface is the Master, and the other is a Backup.  
While the Master interface is active and forwarding traffic, the Backup interface is placed in a  
standby state and blocks traffic. If the Master interface fails, the Backup interface becomes active  
and forwards traffic. Once the Master interface is restored, it transitions to the standby state and  
blocks traffic unless the Backup interface fails.  
OSPF Enhancements  
BLADEOS 5.1 includes multiple enhancements to the GbESM Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)  
implementation:  
Passive Interfaces  
OSPF interfaces may be configured as passive. Passive interfaces send LSAs to active  
interfaces, but do not receive LSAs, hello packets, or any other OSPF protocol information  
from active interfaces. Passive interfaces behave as stub networks, allowing OSPF routing  
devices to be aware of devices that do otherwise participate in OSPF (either because they do  
not support it, or because the administrator chooses to restrict OSPF traffic exchange or  
transit). The following command has been added:  
# /cfg/l3/ospf/if <x>/passive {enable|disable}  
Point-to-Point Networks  
For LANs that have only two OSPF routing agents (the GbESM and one other device),  
specifying the interfaces as part of a point-to-point network allows the switch to significantly  
reduce the amount of routing information it must carry and manage, enhancing OSPF  
efficiency. The following command has been added:  
# /cfg/l3/ospf/if <x>/ptop {enable|disable}  
Sub-second timers  
To increase OSPF convergence speed, hello and dead timers for OSPF interfaces and virtual  
interfaces can now specified in milliseconds by adding “ms” to the number. For example:  
# /cfg/l3/ospf/if <x>/hello 200ms  
(200 milliseconds)  
Loopback Interface Address  
OSPF can now be configured to use the GbESM internal loopback address in advertising its  
Router ID.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
LACP Trunk Enhancements  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports up to eight links in each LACP Link Aggregation Group (LAG).  
Layer 2 Failover Enhancements  
BLADEOS 5.1 includes multiple enhancements to the Layer 2 Failover feature to support advanced  
NIC teaming:  
In addition to the automatic monitoring triggers for trunk links, the switch software now  
supports new manual monitoring triggers. This allows you to define a list of ports and/or static  
or dynamic trunks to disable when a link failure thresdhold is reached on set of trigger ports  
and/or static or dynamic trunks.  
Up to two LACP keys can be used for each failover trigger. Previously, only one per trigger was  
supported.  
ACL Precedence Enhancement  
With BLADEOS 5.1, the implementation of Access Control Lists (ACLs) has been standardized to  
use ascending order of precedence.  
ACLs that are assigned to a port are now processed in numeric sequence, based on ACL number.  
Lower-numbered ACLs take precedence over higher-numbered ACLs within each precedence  
group. For example, ACL 1 (if assigned to the port) is evaluated first and has top priority within  
precedence group 1.  
When upgrading from an earlier version of BLADEOS, the ACLs are automatically renumbered to  
maintain prior function within the new order of precedence.  
Forwarding Database Enhancements  
Configuration of the Forwarding Database (FDB) aging feature has been simplified. Because FDB  
aging required the same value configured in all Spanning Tree Groups (STGs), the per-STG aging  
parameters have been replaced with a single, global configuration command:  
# /cfg/l2/stg <STG number>/brg/aging <value>  
(old per-STG command)  
-replaced by-  
# /cfg/l2/fdb/aging <value>  
(new global command)  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
ISL Layer 2 Protocol Enhancements  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports additional Layer 2 protocols on Inter-Switch Link (ISL) ports:  
VRRP  
STP  
RSTP/MSTP  
802.1Q VLAN Tagging  
802.1p QoS/CoS  
802.1X Port-Based Access Control  
ACLs  
STP Fast Uplink Bridge Priority  
With BLADEOS 5.1, the Fast Uplink Convergence bridge priority has been set to 65535.  
CLI List and Range Inputs  
For CLI commands that allow an individual item to be selected from within a numeric range, lists  
and ranges of items can now be specified. For example, the /info/vlan command permits the  
following options:  
# /info/vlan  
(show all VLANs)  
# /info/vlan 1  
(show only VLAN 1)  
# /info/vlan 1,3,4095  
# /info/vlan 1-20  
# /info/vlan 1-5,90-99,4090-4095  
# /info/vlan 1-5,19,20,4090-4095  
(show listed VLANs)  
(show range 1 through 20)  
(show multiple ranges)  
(show a mix of lists and ranges)  
The numbers in a range must be separated by a dash: <start of range>-<end of range>  
Multiple ranges or list items are permitted using a comma: <range or item 1>,<range or item 2>  
Do not use spaces within list and range specifications.  
Ranges can also be used to apply the same command option to multiple items. For example, to  
enable multiple ports with one command:  
# /cfg/port 1-4/ena  
(Enable ports 1 though 4)  
Note – Port ranges accept only port numbers, not aliases such as INT1 or EXT1  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Chassis Internal Network  
BLADEOS 5.1 now supports BladeCenter Chassis Internal Network (CIN). CIN provides internal  
connectivity between blade server ports and the internal Advanced Management Module (AMM)  
port. This allows blade server users to access the AMM via CLI, web-browser, or SNMP session,  
and allows the AMM to use services on the blades, such as LDAP, SMTP, DNS, and NTP.  
BC-S Chassis Support  
BLADEOS 5.1 supports the BladeCenter BC-S chassis. When the GbESM is installed in the BC-S  
chassis, the following information displays reflect the BC-S port mapping:  
Port link information (/info/link) for switches installed in bay 1 and bay 2:  
Alias  
----  
Port  
-----  
Speed  
-----  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
100  
10000  
10000  
10000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
Duplex  
-------- --TX-----RX--  
Flow Ctrl  
Link  
------  
up  
up  
up  
up  
down  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
INT1A  
INT1B  
INT2A  
INT2B  
INT3A  
INT3B  
INT4A  
INT4B  
INT5A  
INT5B 10  
INT6A 11  
INT6B 12  
SMGT1 13  
SMGT2 14  
MGT1  
EXT1  
EXT2  
EXT3  
EXT4  
EXT5  
EXT6  
EXT7  
EXT8  
EXT9  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
any  
any  
any  
any  
any  
any  
any  
any  
any  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
15  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Port link information (/info/link) for switches installed in bay 3 and bay 4:  
Alias  
----  
Port  
-----  
Speed  
-----  
Duplex  
-------- --TX-----RX--  
Flow Ctrl  
Link  
------  
INT1  
INT2  
INT3  
INT4  
INT5  
INT6  
MGT1  
EXT1  
EXT2  
...  
1
2
3
4
5
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
1000  
100  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
full  
any  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
yes  
up  
up  
down  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
up  
6
15  
17  
18  
10000  
10000  
any  
Port information (/info/port) for switches installed in bay 1 and bay 2:  
Alias Port Tag Fast Lrn Fld PVID  
NAME  
VLAN(s)  
----- ---- --- ---- --- --- ---- -------------- --------------------  
INT1A  
INT1B  
INT2A  
INT2B  
INT3A  
INT3B  
INT4A  
INT4B  
INT5A  
INT5B 10  
INT6A 11  
INT6B 12  
SMGT1 13  
SMGT2 14  
MGT1  
EXT1  
EXT2  
EXT3  
EXT4  
EXT5  
EXT6  
EXT7  
EXT8  
EXT9  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
1 INT1A  
1 INT1B  
1 INT2A  
1 INT2B  
1 INT3A  
1 INT3B  
1 INT4A  
1 INT4B  
1 INT5A  
1 INT5B  
1 INT6A  
1 INT6B  
1 SMGT1  
1 SMGT2  
4095*MGT1  
1 EXT1  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
4095  
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
15  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
1 EXT2  
1 EXT3  
1 EXT4  
1 EXT5  
1 EXT6  
1 EXT7  
1 EXT8  
1 EXT9  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Port information (/info/port) for switches installed in bay 3 and bay 4:  
Alias Port Tag Fast Lrn Fld PVID  
NAME  
VLAN(s)  
----- ---- --- ---- --- --- ---- -------------- --------------------  
INT1  
INT2  
INT3  
INT4  
INT5  
INT6  
MGT1  
EXT1  
EXT2  
...  
1
2
3
4
5
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
1 INT1  
1 INT2  
1 INT3  
1 INT4  
1 INT5  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
1 4095  
4095  
6
1 INT6  
15  
17  
18  
4095*MGT1  
1 EXT1  
1
1
1 EXT2  
Other Features  
BLADEOS 5.1 now also supports  
PVRST  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Supplemental Information  
This section provides additional information about configuring and operating the GbESM and  
BLADEOS.  
Management Module  
The “Fast POST=Disabled/Enabled” inside the IBM management module Web interface “I/O  
Module Admin Power/Restart” does not apply to the GbESM.  
Solution: To boot with Fast or Extended POST, go to the “I/O Module Admin/Power/Restart”  
window. Select the GbESM, and then choose “Restart Module and Run Standard Diagnostics”  
or “Restart Module and Run Extended Diagnostics.”  
The following table correlates the Firmware Type listed in the IBM management module’s Web  
interface “Firmware VPD” window to the GbESM software version:  
Table 2 Firmware Type list  
Firmware Type  
Description  
Boot ROM  
GbESM Boot code version  
Main Application 1 Currently running image  
Main Application 2 Backup image  
Within the IBM management module Web interface, the Java applets of “Start Telnet Session”  
and “Start Web Session” do not support changing of default known ports 23 and 80  
respectively.  
Solution: If the Telnet or HTTP port on the GbESM is changed to something other than the  
default port number, the user must use a separate Telnet client or Web browser that supports  
specifying a non-default port to start a session to the GbESM user interface.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Management Module/GbESM Connectivity  
Currently, the IBM management module is designed to provide one-way control of the GbESM. As  
a result, the GbESM may lose connectivity to the management module via the management port  
under the following conditions:  
If new IP attributes are pushed from the management module to the GbESM while the IP  
Routing table is full, the new attributes will not be applied.  
Solution: Enable “External Management over all ports,” connect to the switch using other  
interface and then clear the routing table. Then push the IP address from the management  
module. If this does not work, use Solution 2 below.  
If you execute the /boot/reset CLI command on the GbESM or the GbESM resets itself, the  
management module might not push the IP attributes to the switch, and connectivity may be  
lost.  
Solution 1: If you should experience any connectivity issues between the switch module and the  
management module, go to the “I/O Module Configuration” window on the management module’s  
Web interface. Under the “New Static IP Configuration” section, click Save to trigger the  
management module to push the stored IP attributes to the switch module.  
Solution 2: If Solution 1 does not resolve your connectivity issue, then go to the “I/O Module  
Admin/Power/Restart” window on the management module’s Web interface. Restart the switch  
module in question.  
Solution 3: If this still does not resolve the issue, enable Preserve new IP configuration on all resets  
setting on the management module and restart the switch module via the “I/O Module  
Admin/Power/Restart” window on the management module’s Web interface.  
Note – As a rule, always use the management module Web interface to change the GbESM  
management IP attributes (IP address, mask and gateway), and then click Save to push the IP  
attributes to the switch module. Use of the command-line interface to change the switch module  
management IP attributes may result in duplicated entries for the management IP Interface in the  
switch route table and/or loss of connectivity via the management module.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Secure Management Network  
The following GbESM attributes are reserved to provide secure management access to and from the  
IBM management module:  
Internal management—  
MGT1 (port 15) and MGT2 (port 16)  
VLAN 4095  
IP interface 128  
Gateway 4  
STG 128  
For more information about remotely managing the GbESM through the external ports, see  
“Accessing the Switch” in the BLADEOS 5.1 Application Guide.  
Note – The external uplink ports (EXTx) cannot be members of management VLANs.  
Secure Shell (SSH)  
Because SSH key generation is CPU intensive, the GbESM attempts to avoid unnecessary key  
generation. The process generates three server keys:  
1. One key is generated to replace the current server key, if used.  
2. A second key is generated as a spare, in case the current server key is used and the specified interval  
expires.  
3. A third key is generated for use at the next reboot.  
Therefore, if you never login via SSH, you will only see two key generation events. You may see all  
three events directly following a reboot. If you want to witness the key generation after the specified  
interval has expired, then you must login via SSH at least once during each expiration interval.  
Trunk Group Configuration Tips  
Please be aware of the following information when you configure trunk groups:  
Always configure trunk groups first on both ends, before you physically connect the links.  
Configure all ports in a trunk group to the same speed (you cannot aggregate 1Gb ports with  
10GBASE-SFP+ ports).  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Spanning Tree Configuration Tips  
To ensure proper operation with switches that use Cisco Per VLAN Spanning Tree (PVST+), you  
must do one of the following:  
Create a separate Spanning Tree Group for each VLAN.  
Manually add all associated VLANs into a single Spanning Tree Group.  
When using Layer 2 Trunk Failover, disable Spanning Tree Protocol on external ports.  
Syslog Configuration Tip  
The facility parameter traditionally is used to correlate services (such as IP, CLI, etc.) to messages.  
This is done to distinguish between the different services that are running in the network/device.  
However, for the GbESM, there is a single configured facility value (0-7) used on all messages. By  
configuring a unique facility value for each switch, a single SYSLOG server can distinguish  
between the various GbESMs in the network. Refer to “System Host Log Configuration” in the  
BLADEOS 5.1 Command Reference.  
Internal Port Autonegotiation  
By default, link autonegotiation is turned on for internal ports. This is in contrast to external ports,  
where autonegotiation is off by default. Internal ports use autonegotiation in order to support the  
Wake-Over-LAN (WOL) features of some servers. If an attached server does not support  
autonegotiation or WOL, turn autonegotiation off for the internal port.  
FTP/TFTP Directory Path  
When you use the CLI to perform a FTP/TFTP file transfer, you cannot use a forward slash ( / ) in  
the directory path, unless it is preceded by a back slash ( \ ). This issue occurs only when a full  
command is issued on one line.  
For example, the following is invalid:  
# /boot/gtimg 1 10.10.10.2 image_directory/filename  
The following is correct:  
# /boot/gtimg 1 10.10.10.2 image_directory\/filename  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Known issues  
The following are known issues for BLADEOS 5.1 on the 1/10Gb Uplink Ethernet Switch Module.  
Access Control Lists  
When an Access Control List (ACL) is installed on two different ports, only one statistics  
counter will be available. The GbESM does not support two different statistics counter for one  
ACL installed on two different ports.  
The ACL filters for TCP/UDP work properly only on packets that do not have IP options.  
When configuring an ACL to set 802.1p priority for in-profile packets, and updating the DSCP  
field using TOS bits for out-of-profile packets, the out-of-profile packets will have also the  
802.1p priority set as defined in the in-profile setting.  
Although the management port can be configured for port filtering option, actual port filtering  
will not occur, because the system filters out the management VLAN.  
IGMP Relay  
When having joins from multiple VLANs, and the multicast data transmitter is on a VLAN that  
did not receive any joins, multicast data is routed only if the flood option is disabled using the  
/cfg/l3/igmp/adv/flood d command.  
If an IGMP v2 joins an IGMP group on the same port where an IGMP v1 join has already been  
issued, the software will default to the IGMP v1 timeout value.  
Interoperability with Older Hubs  
The command-line interface might display link up and link down messages continuously for an  
external port that is connected to certain older hub models configured for 100 Mbps halfduplex. The  
display might show link up erroneously. This behavior has been observed when connecting the  
GbESM with the following devices:  
NETGEAR FE104 100 hub  
SBS 1000Base-T NIC  
3Com Linkbuilder FMS100 Hub 3C250 TX/I  
3Com SuperStack II 100TX 3C250C-TX-24/12  
Nortel Baystack 204 Hub  
If the GbESM is connected to an Alteon Application Switch which requires a link speed of 100  
Mbps half-duplex, then enable auto negotiation on the GbESM port with port speed=any,  
mode=any, fctl=both, and auto=on.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Link Aggregation Control Protocol  
If a static trunk on a GbESM is connected to another GbESM with LACP configured (but no active  
LACP trunk), the /info/l2/trunk command might erroneously report the static trunk as  
forwarding.  
Since LACP trunks use LACPDU packet to maintain trunking with the partner, there is a possibility  
for those packets to be dropped from an extremely busy trunk. If this happens, some links in the  
LACP trunk might be removed, then aggregated back to the trunk if an LACPDU is received. To  
avoid this unstable LACP trunk link, you can add more links to the trunk to increase the bandwidth,  
or use regular static trunk if there are no more links available.  
Linking at 10/100Mb  
When the link speed for an external connection is forced (i.e. no Auto-Negotiation) to 100 Mbps  
and then changed to 10 Mbps, if the external device is changed first, the external device may  
erroneously report the link as DOWN even after the GbESM is changed to 10 Mbps.  
Solution: At the external device, disconnect and reconnect the cable.  
Static Mrouter  
If a port has a static multicast router (Mrouter) configured, and you move the port to a different  
VLAN, the static Mrouter appears in the /info/l3/igmp/mrouter/dump output for the  
original VLAN.  
Solution: When you move the port to a new VLAN, remove the static Mrouter from the port, and  
add it again.  
QoS Metering  
Traffic may exceed the configured maximum burst size of the ACL meter  
(/cfg/port <x>/aclqos/meter/mbsize) by one packet, with that packet remaining  
In-Profile. Once the ACL meter has been exceeded, additional burst packets fall Out-of-Profile.  
QoS and Trunking  
When you assign an ACL (or ACL Group) to one port in a trunk, BLADEOS does not automatically  
assign the ACL to other ports in the trunk, and it does not prompt you to assign the ACL to other  
ports in the trunk.  
Solution: Manually assign each ACL or ACL Group to all ports in a trunk.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
RADIUS with SSHv2  
With RADIUS turned on, users might see a duplicate login prompt for SSHv2 clients, if the  
RADIUS server is too slow to respond or if the RADIUS server is not available. In this case, users  
must re-type the username and password to login.  
RIP MIBs  
Due to backward-compatibility issues, two Routing Information Protocol (RIP) MIBs are available  
in BLADEOS: ripCfg and rip2Cfg. Use the rip2Cfg MIB to configure RIPv1 and RIPv2  
through SNMP.  
BLADEOS does not support the standard RIPv2 MIB, as described in RFC 1724. Use the  
rip2Cfg MIB to configure RIPv1 and RIPv2 through SNMP.  
Trunk and Link Loop  
When you create a trunk or link loop between the GbESM and another switch, packets might loop  
infinitely at line rate within the related links. When this problem occurs, the GbESM continuously  
displays the following messages at the console:  
WARNING: packet_sent u: 0, dv_active: tx ring full  
packet_sent dcnt=114, public1=110, vcnt=1025  
Solution: Remove the loop to resolve this misconfiguration.  
Trunk Traffic  
Multicast, broadcast and DLF (Destination Lookup Failure, which are unknown destination MAC  
packets) traffic is sent to the lowest numbered port in the trunk. If this port is down, then the traffic  
is sent to the next lowest-numbered port. If the port that was down comes up again, the traffic is not  
re-hashed back to the recovered port.  
Browser Based Interface  
Some versions of Microsoft Internet Explorer version 6.x do not perform HTTP download  
efficiently. If you have one of these versions, HTTP software download might take much  
longer than expected (up to several minutes).  
Web-browsers from different vendors may vary in their support of standard features. If you  
encounter problems using the BBI in a particular browser, a different browser may resolve the  
issue.  
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BLADE OS 5.1 Release Notes  
Strong Password Expiration  
If you configure a Strong Password with automatic expiration, the password might not expire if the  
system date and time is not configured first. Use of a Network Time Protocol (NTP) server resolves  
this issue.  
Solution: When you configure a strong password with automatic expiration, first configure the  
system time and date for the switch.  
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