The VSMs communicate with vCenter to coordinate the physical and virtual NICs on the servers and how they are connected to the VEMs. You use vCenter to manage which physical NICs are associated with a VEM. Physical NICs show up as eth<id> interfaces on the Nexus 1000v. The virtual NICs associated with the hosts show up as veth<id> interfaces. For those not familiar with NX-OS, ethernet interfaces can be 10Mbps, 100Mbps, 1Gbps or 10Gbps. Unlike IOS the name doesn't designate the speed.
Because of the way that the VEMs communicate with the VSM, it is crucial to maintain the networking links between the VSMs and the VEM or the VEM will disappear from the Nexus 1000v. If it is disconnected, the VEM continues to forward traffic in the last known configuration but it is not configurable.
In my next posts on the Nexus 1000v, I will run through the basics of getting a Nexus 1000v installed into a vSphere 4.1 environment.
Because of the way that the VEMs communicate with the VSM, it is crucial to maintain the networking links between the VSMs and the VEM or the VEM will disappear from the Nexus 1000v. If it is disconnected, the VEM continues to forward traffic in the last known configuration but it is not configurable.
In my next posts on the Nexus 1000v, I will run through the basics of getting a Nexus 1000v installed into a vSphere 4.1 environment.
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