Overview
IB Network
The IB network features low latency and high bandwidth and is used in a number of High Performance Computing (HPC) projects. It uses the 100 Gbit/s Mellanox IB NIC, dedicated IB switch, and controller software UFM to ensure network communication and management, and uses the Partition Key to isolate IB networks of different tenants (similar to VLANs in the Ethernet). The IB network supports two communication modes, RDMA and IPoIB.
To create an IB network, you must select a flavor that supports the IB network during BMS creation. After an IB network is provisioned, BMSs can communicate with each other in RDMA mode. In the IPoIB communication mode, you need to configure IP addresses on the IB network port. You can use static IP addresses or IP addresses dynamically assigned by DHCP. Examples of static IP addresses are as follows:
#/etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg-ib0 DEVICE=ib0 TYPE=InfiniBand ONBOOT=yes HWADDR=80:00:00:4c:fe:80:00:00:00:00:00:00:f4:52:14:03:00:7b:cb:a1 BOOTPROTO=none IPADDR=172.31.0.254 PREFIX=24 NETWORK=172.31.0.0 BROADCAST=172.31.0.255 IPV4_FAILURE_FATAL=yes IPV6INIT=no MTU=65520 CONNECTED_MODE=yes NAME=ib0
In the IB network, an IP address is assigned to a new BMS in DHCP mode by default. You can manually specify a static IP address not in use to the BMS.
For more information about the IPoIB communication mode, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/infiniband/ipoib.txt.
View IB Networks
IB networks are presented to you through the BMS specifications. For example, if the extended configuration of a flavor is 1*100G IB + 2*10GE, the BMS has IB NICs. You need to configure and plan the VLANs and IP addresses.
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