Virtual Cluster Switching
Virtual Cluster Switching fabric technology is a Layer 2 proprietary Ethernet technology from Brocade Communications Systems, later acquired by Extreme Networks. It is designed to improve network utilization, maximize application availability, increase scalability, and simplify the network architecture in virtualized data centers.
Ethernet Fabrics
Ethernet fabrics encompasses Data Center Bridging technologies, IEEE 802.1aq and the emerging IETF standard, Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links, to provide a more efficient way of moving data throughout the network. An Ethernet fabric is promoted for Fibre Channel over Ethernet and iSCSI storage traffic.Ethernet fabrics have the following characteristics:
- Flatter: Ethernet fabrics are self-aggregating, enabling a flatter network.
- Intelligent: Switches in the fabric know about each other and all connected devices.
- Scalable: All paths are available for high performance and high reliability.
- Efficient: Traffic automatically travels along the shortest path.
- Simple: The fabric is managed as a single logical entity.
Brocade SAN fabric technology is currently deployed in over 90 percent of the Global 1000 data centers. With VCS Fabric technology, Brocade will be bringing the same level of innovation to the data center LAN environment.
Distributed intelligence
With VCS Fabric technology, all configuration and destination information is distributed to each member switch in the fabric. For example, when a server connects to the fabric for the first time, all switches in the fabric learn about that server. Also, when two VCS-enabled switches are connected, the fabric is automatically created, and the switches discover the common fabric configuration. This fabric configuration is shared amongst all of the switches in the fabric, making it masterless, so no single switch stores configuration information or controls fabric operations.Distributed intelligence enables the automatic migration of port profiles which ensures that the source and destination network ports have the same configuration when virtual machines migrate.