6.7

Table Of Contents
Figure 111. 1:1 Adapter Mapping on Separate vSphere Standard Switches
VMkernel adapters
Physical adapters
vmnic1
iSCSI1
vmk1
vSwitch1
VMkernel adapters
Physical adapters
vmnic2
iSCSI2
vmk2
vSwitch2
An alternative is to add all NICs and VMkernel adapters to the single vSphere switch. In this case, you
must override the default network setup and make sure that each VMkernel adapter maps to only one
corresponding active physical adapter.
Figure 112. 1:1 Adapter Mapping on a Single vSphere Standard Switch
VMkernel adapters
Physical adapters
vmnic2
vmnic1
iSCSI2
vmk2
iSCSI1
vmk1
vSwitch1
The examples show configurations that use vSphere standard switches, but you can use distributed
switches as well. For more information about vSphere distributed switches, see the vSphere Networking
documentation.
The following considerations apply when you use multiple physical adapters:
n
Physical network adapters must be on the same subnet as the storage system they connect to.
n
If you use separate vSphere switches, you must connect them to different IP subnets. Otherwise,
VMkernel adapters might experience connectivity problems and the host fails to discover the LUNs.
n
The single switch configuration is not appropriate for iSER because iSER does not support NIC
teaming.
Do not use port binding when any of the following conditions exist:
n
Array target iSCSI ports are in a different broadcast domain and IP subnet.
n
VMkernel adapters used for iSCSI connectivity exist in different broadcast domains, IP subnets, or
use different virtual switches.
vSphere Storage
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