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Operating Systems Solaris aggr not persistent after a reboot Post 302586496 by christr on Monday 2nd of January 2012 07:55:17 AM
Old 01-02-2012
I've setup several aggregates in the past. Just to make sure, are you working with your network team on this? The aggregate has to be setup on the switch end as well or it won't work. Both connections have to be going to the same switch. I've had trouble in the past with network guys who didn't know how to set it up properly on their end.

Sometimes the network guys also won't know what you mean by "aggregate" since it can sometimes go different names depending on vendors. I had to actually send our network guy the Wikipedia link so that he could go research how to do it on their Cisco switch -- Link aggregation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Depending on the network infrastructure in the data center sometimes network teams will freak out on you about this as well. I tried to set it up one data center, and the network team rejected it because they only had 2 GB links going between their switches in the data center and they were concerned I would flood their links.

Good luck! Once it's setup it works like a charm, and is persistant across reboots. I did this for a backup server in one data center that was getting bogged down at night due to so much traffic from various servers. After I set that up it knocked the backup times almost in half. It was awesome watching how fast the data was transferring.

Example syntax would be similar to this:

Code:
dladm create-aggr -d bge0 -d bge1 2
 
dladm show-aggr ### (to verify you set it up properly)
 
#### (Then do your ifconfig commands as necessary, you shouldn't have to reboot to make sure it's working. 
# Once you know it's working update your /etc/hostname.* files in Solaris 10 or ipadm in Solaris 11 and 
# reboot to make sure it continues to work across reboots.)
### Example:
ifconfig aggr2 plumb
ifconfig aggr2 ................


Last edited by jim mcnamara; 01-02-2012 at 10:28 AM..
 

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dladm(1M)																 dladm(1M)

NAME
dladm - configure data-link interfaces SYNOPSIS
dladm show-link [-s [-i interval]] [-p] [name] dladm show-dev [-s [-i interval]] [-p] [dev] dladm create-aggr [-t] [-R root-dir] [-P policy] [-l mode] [-T time] [-u address] -d dev [-d dev] ... key dladm delete-aggr [-t] [-R root-dir] key dladm add-aggr [-t] [-R root-dir] -d dev [-d dev] ... key dladm remove-aggr [-t] [-R root-dir] -d dev [-d dev] ... key dladm modify-aggr [-t] [-R root-dir] [-P policy] [-l mode] [-T time] [-u address] key dladm show-aggr [-L] [-s [-i interval]] [-p] [key] dladm -? The dladm command is used to configure data-links. A configured data-link is represented in the system as a STREAMS DLPI (v2) interface which may be plumbed under protocol stacks such as TCP/IP. Each data-link relies on either a single network device or an aggregation of devices to send packets to or receive packets from a network. The dladm command operates on the following kinds of object: link Data-links, identified by a name aggr Aggregations of network devices, identified by a key dev Network devices, identified by concatenation of a driver name and an instance number Some devices do not support configurable data-links or aggregations. The fixed data-links provided by such devices can be viewed using dladm, but can not be configured. SUBCOMMANDS The following subcommands are supported: show-link Show configuration information for all data-links or the specified data-link. By default, the system is configured to have one data-link for each known network device. show-dev Shows information for all devices or the specified device. create-aggr Creates an aggregation using the given key value from as many dev objects as are specified. A data-link is created by default, and is given a name which is the concatenation of "aggr" and the key value of the aggregation. delete-aggr Deletes the specified aggregation. add-aggr Adds as many dev objects as are specified to the given aggregation. remove-aggr Removes as many dev objects as are specified from the given aggregation. modify-aggr Modifies the parameters of the given aggregation. show-aggr Shows configuration information for all aggregations or the specified aggregation. The following options are supported: -k key --key=key The key of an aggregation. This must be an integer value between 1 and 999. -d dev --dev=dev A device specifier. This must be a concatenation of the name and instance of the driver bound to the device. -P policy --policy=policy Specifies the port selection policy to use for load spreading of outbound traffic. The policy specifies which dev object is used to send packets. A policy consists of a list of one or more layers specifiers separated by commas. A layer specifier is one of the follow- ing: L2 Select outbound device according to source and destination MAC addresses of the packet. L3 Select outbound device according to source and destination IP addresses of the packet. L4 Select outbound device according to the upper layer protocol information contained in the packet. For TCP and UDP, this includes source and destination ports. For IPsec, this includes the SPI (Security Parameters Index.) For example, to use upper layer protocol information, the following policy can be used: -P L4 To use the source and destination MAC addresses as well as the source and destination IP addresses, the following policy can be used: -P L2,L3 -l mode --lacp-mode=mode Specifies whether LACP should be used and, if used, the mode in which it should operate. Legal values are off, active or passive. -T time --lacp-timer=time Specifies the LACP timer value. The legal values are short or long. -u address --unicast=address Specifies a fixed unicast address to be used for the aggregation. If this option is not specified then an address is automatically cho- sen from the set of addresses of the component devices. -L --lacp Specifies whether detailed LACP information should be displayed. -s --statistics Used with the show-link, show-aggr, or show-dev subcommands to show the statistics of data-links, aggregations or devices, respec- tively. -i interval --interval=interval Used with the -s option to specify an interval, in seconds, at which statistics should be displayed. If this option is not specified, statistics will only be displayed once. -t --temporary Specifies that the change is temporary. Temporary changes last until the next reboot. -R root-dir --root-dir=root-dir Specifies an alternate root directory where dladm applies changes. This can be useful in JumpStart scripts, where the root directory of the system being modified is mounted elsewhere. -p --parseable Specifies that configuration information should be displayed in parseable format. -? --help Displays help information. (Stops interpretation of subsequent arguments). EXAMPLES
Example 1: Configuring an aggregation To configure a data-link over an aggregation of devices bge0 and bge1 with key 1, enter the following command: # dladm create-aggr -d bge0 bge1 1 See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: /usr/sbin +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Evolving | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ /sbin +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsr | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Evolving | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ ifconfig(1M), attributes(5), dlpi(7P) NOTES
The configuration of all objects will persist across reboot. 28 Sep 2005 dladm(1M)
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