Using IP Network Multipathing on a Solaris
System With Zones Installed
How to Use IP Network Multipathing in Exclusive-IP
Non-Global Zones
IP Network Multipathing (IPMP) in an exclusive-IP zone is configured
as it is in the global zone.
You can configure one or more physical interfaces into an IP multipathing
group, or IPMP group. After configuring IPMP, the system automatically monitors
the interfaces in the IPMP group for failure. If an interface in the group
fails or is removed for maintenance, IPMP automatically migrates, or fails
over, the failed interface's IP addresses. The recipient of these addresses
is a functioning interface in the failed interface's IPMP group. The failover
feature of IPMP preserves connectivity and prevents disruption of any existing
connections. Additionally, IPMP improves overall network performance by automatically
spreading out network traffic across the set of interfaces in the IPMP group.
This process is called load spreading.
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Become superuser, or assume the Primary Administrator role.
To create the role and assign the role to a user, see Using the Solaris Management Tools With RBAC (Task Map) in System Administration Guide: Basic Administration.
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Configure IPMP groups as described in Configuring IPMP Groups in System Administration Guide: Network Interfaces and Network Virtualization.
How to Extend IP Network Multipathing Functionality
to Shared-IP Non-Global Zones
Use this procedure to configure IPMP in the global zone and extend the
IPMP functionality to non-global zones.
Each address, or logical interface, should be associated with a non-global
zone when you configure the zone. See Using the zonecfg Command and How to Configure the Zone for instructions.
This procedure accomplishes the following:
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The cards bge0 and hme0 are
configured together in a group.
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Address 192.168.0.1 is associated with the non-global zone my-zone.
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The bge0 card is set as the physical interface.
Thus, the IP address is hosted in the group that contains the bge0 and hme0 cards.
In a running zone, you can use the ifconfig command
to make the association. See Shared-IP Network Interfaces and the ifconfig(1M) man page.
You must be the global administrator in the global zone to perform this
procedure.
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Become superuser, or assume the Primary
Administrator role.
To create the role and assign the role to
a user, see Using the Solaris Management Tools With RBAC (Task Map) in System Administration Guide: Basic Administration.
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In the global zone, configure IPMP groups
as described in Configuring IPMP Groups in System Administration Guide: Network Interfaces and Network Virtualization.
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Use the zonecfg command
to configure the zone. When you configure the net resource,
add address 192.168.0.1 and physical interface bge0 to
the zone my-zone:
zonecfg:my-zone> add net
zonecfg:my-zone:net> set address=192.168.0.1
zonecfg:my-zone:net> set physical=bge0
zonecfg:my-zone:net> end
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Only bge0 would be visible in non-global zone my-zone.
If bge0 Subsequently Fails
If bge0 subsequently fails and the bge0 data
addresses fail over to hme0 in the global zone, the my-zone addresses migrate as well.
If address 192.168.0.1 moves to hme0,
then only hme0 would now be visible in non-global zone my-zone. This card would be associated with address 192.168.0.1, and bge0 would no longer be visible.