Unfortunately I have to connect
to ISCSI on both interfaces, (1 port to 1 network ,3 ports aggregated to the
other). The problem only occurs with ESX, because ESX is trying to connect to
both networks even though its only physically attached to one.
From: Vaughn Stewart
[mailto:mvstew@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2007 2:29 PM
To: Justin Brodley
Cc: toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: Re: ISCSI Issue and VMWare ESX 3.0.1
BY default NetApp enables iSCSI on all Ethernet
interfaces. You should disable the interfaces which you do not want to
connect via iSCSI on.
Vaughn
Justin Brodley wrote:
I’m currently dealing with a problem on several of our ESX
IBM LS21 Blades when trying to attach to ISCSI Luns on the Netapp FAS
3020’s. Our Netapp currently connects to two separate physical networks
to deliver ISCSI connectivity. The ESX support folks are telling us that the
netapp presents both ISCSI interfaces to the server. Initially the ESX
box connects on the correct interface, but then after a few hours it attempts
to try the other IP address and fails and disconnects the entire VM Host from
the Netapp, despite the fact that the network never went down. We have several
Windows 2003 servers with ISCSI initiator that don’t have this problem on
identical hardware and chassis.
I assume that either ESX’s iscsi initiator is badly
designed, or MS has broken some industry standard spec. To rearchitect
our storage network will take significant investment on our part, and we’d
rather come up with a way to fix this either by pushing on ESX to fix the
initiator or finding a way to have the Netapp only send one IP address back to
the initiator. Is there any way to resolve this from the Netapp perspective?
Thanks in advance.
-Justin