Users Guide

Table Of Contents
Command Mode INTERFACE
Usage Information
OS10 supports this conguration only on a switch running FSB mode, and on Ethernet and port-channel interfaces.
You cannot congure FIP snooping port mode on a port channel member.
Use this command to change the port mode. By default, the port mode of an interface is set to ENode. Congure
the port mode only after you enable FIP snooping. Before you disable FIP snooping, reset the port mode to its
default value, ENode.
You cannot disable FIP snooping when the port mode is set to a non-default value (enode-transit, fcf, or fcf-
transit).
If you want to change the port mode from one value to another, you can directly use the fip-snooping port
mode command. You do not have to explicitly use the no form of the command.
The no version of this command resets the port mode to ENode.
Example
OS10(config)# interface ethernet 1/1/32
OS10(conf-if-eth1/1/32)# fip-snooping port-mode fcf
Supported Releases 10.4.0E(R1) or later10.4.3.0 or later—Support for enode-transit and fcf-transit port modes added.
FCoE commands
The following commands are supported on all the three modes: F_Port, NPG, and FSB.
clear fcoe database
Clears the FCoE database for the specied VLAN.
Syntax
clear fcoe database vlan vlan-id {enode enode-mac-address | fcf fcf-mac-address
| session fcoe-mac-address}
Parameters
vlan-id — Enter the VLAN ID.
enode-mac-address — Enter the MAC address of the ENode.
fcf-mac-address — Enter the MAC address of the FCF.
fcoe-mac-address — Enter the MAC address of the FCoE session.
Default Not congured
Command Mode EXEC
Usage Information None
Example
OS10# clear fcoe database vlan 100 enode aa:bb:cc:00:00:00
Supported Releases 10.4.0E(R1) or later
320 Fibre Channel