PDF(237.3 KB) View with Adobe Reader on a variety of devices
ePub(113.5 KB) View in various apps on iPhone, iPad, Android, Sony Reader, or Windows Phone
Mobi (Kindle)(118.5 KB) View on Kindle device or Kindle app on multiple devices
Updated:October 6, 2014
Bias-Free Language
The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For the purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product. Learn more about how Cisco is using Inclusive Language.
Release notes are sometimes updated with new information about restrictions and caveats. See the following website for the most recent version of the Cisco NX-OS Release 11.0(1d) Release Notes for Cisco Nexus 9000 Series ACI-Mode Switches:
The Cisco Application Centric Infrastructure (ACI) is an architecture that allows the application to define the networking requirements in a programmatic way. This architecture simplifies, optimizes, and accelerates the entire application deployment life cycle.
Simplified automation with an application-driven policy model
Common platform for managing physical, virtual, and cloud-based environments
Centralized visibility with real-time, application health monitoring
Operational simplicity, with common policy, management, and operation models across application, network, and security resources
Open software flexibility for DevOps teams and ecosystem partner integration
Scalable performance and secure multi-tenancy
ACI Fabric and Switches
A clustered replicated APIC appliance manages the ACI fabric. Cisco Nexus 9000 Series switches can run with the ACI-compatible software to run in the leaf/spine fabric mode. These switches form a “fat-tree” network by connecting each leaf node to each spine node; all other devices connect to the leaf nodes.
Figure 1shows the ACI Fabric with Cisco Nexus 9508, Cisco Nexus 9300 Series leaf switches, and the APIC.
Figure 1 ACI Fabric with Spine and Leaf Switches, and the APIC,
Cisco Nexus 9000 Series ACI-Mode
Cisco NX-OS Software for the Cisco Nexus 9000 Series is a data center, purpose-built, operating system designed with performance, resiliency, scalability, manageability, and programmability at its foundation. It provides a robust and comprehensive feature set that meets the requirements of virtualization and automation in data centers
Cisco NX-OS Release 11.0 works only on Cisco Nexus 9000 Series switches in ACI Mode.
See Table 2 for a list of modules that are supported on Cisco Nexus 9000 Series switches in ACI Mode.
Switch Features
The Cisco Nexus 9000 Series switches have the following features:
Predictable high performance
Nonblocking, high-density 1 and 10 Gigabit Ethernet configuration
Nonblocking, high-density 10 and 40 Gigabit Ethernet configuration
Advanced optics
Highly available, scalable, and robust solution
Chassis designed for 2 to 3 future generations of line cards
Supported Hardware
Table 2 lists the hardware that the Cisco Nexus 9000 Series ACI Mode switches support.
Table 2 Supported Hardware
Hardware Type
Product ID
Description
Spine switch
N9K-C9508-B1
Cisco Nexus 9508 chassis bundle with 1 supervisor module, 3 power supplies, 2 system controllers, 3 fan trays, and 3 fabric modules
Spine switch
N9K-C9508-B2
Cisco Nexus 9508 chassis bundle with 1 supervisor module, 3 power supplies, 2 system controllers, 3 fan trays, and 6 fabric modules
Table 3 lists the FEX models that the Cisco Nexus 9000 Series ACI Mode switches support. For more information on the FEX models, see Cisco Nexus 2000 Series Fabric Extenders Data Sheet.
Note FEX requires software version 5.x or later to be brought up successfully.
Table 3 Supported FEX Models
Product ID
Description
N2K-C2248PQ-10GE
Cisco Nexus 2248PQ 10GE Fabric Extender, 2PS, 4 Fan Module, 48x1/10GE (req SFP/SFP+) + 4x40G QSFP+(req QSFP+), choice of airflow and power supply
N2K-C2248TP-E-1GE
Cisco Nexus 2248TP-E Series 1GE Fabric Extender, 2PS, 1 Fan Module, 48x100/1000Base-T + 4x10GE (req SFP+), 32MB buffer, choice of airflow and power supply
N2K-C2248TP-1GE
Cisco Nexus 2248TP Series 1GE Fabric Extender, 2 AC PS, 1 Fan Module (Standard Airflow/port side exhaust), 48x100/1000Base-T + 4x10GE (req SFP+), same as N2K-C2248TP
N2K-C2232PP-10GE
Cisco Nexus 2232PP Series 10GE Fabric Extender, 2 AC PS, 1 Fan Module (Standard Airflow/port side exhaust), 32x1/10GE (req SFP/SFP+) + 8x10GE (req SFP+), same as N2K-C2232PP
N2K-C2232TM-E-10GE
Cisco Nexus 2232TM-E Series 10GBASE-T Fabric Extender, 2PS, 1 Fan Module, 32x1/10GBase-T + 8x10GE Module (req SFP+), choice of airflow and power supply
Installation Notes
For installation instructions, see the Cisco ACI Fabric Hardware Installation Guide.
Compatibility Information
Cisco NX-OS Release 11.0(1d) supports the following:
Cisco APIC Release 1.0(1k)
Cisco AVS, Release 4.2(1)SV2(2.3)
Cisco ASA 5585, Release 8.4 and higher
Cisco ASAv (virtual), Release 9.2.1
F5, Big IP, LTM Physical, LTM Virtual, Version 11.4.1
Citrix Netscaler, MPX, SDX, VPX, Release 10.1 and higher
Citrix Netscaler 1000v, ESX 5.0 and higher
VMware vCenter 5.1 and 5.5 and vShield 5.1 and 5.5
Usage Guidelines
The current list of protocols that are allowed (and cannot be blocked through contracts) include the following. Some of the protocols have SrcPort/DstPort distinction.
– UDP DestPort 161: SNMP. These cannot be blocked through contracts. Creating an SNMP ClientGroup with a list of Client-IP Addresses restricts SNMP access to only those configured Client-IP Addresses. If no Client-IP address is configured, SNMP packets are allowed from anywhere.
This section lists the open caveats in Cisco NX-OS Release 11.0(1b), Release 11.0(1c), and Release 11.0(1d). Click the Bug ID shown in Table 4 to access the Bug Search Tool and see additional information about the bug.
The following power redundancy modes are supported: non-redundant, redundant, and power output redundancy (N+1).
Resolved Caveats
This section lists caveats that are resolved in Cisco NX-OS Release 11.0(1d). Click the Bug ID shown in Table 5 to access the Bug Search Tool and see additional information about the bug.
Table 5 Resolved Caveats
Bug ID
Description
CSCur01249
The Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller (APIC) includes a version of bash that is affected by the vulnerabilities identified by the Common Vulnerability and Exposures (CVE) IDs: CVE-2014-6271 and CVE-2014-7169.
The Cisco Nexus 9000 includes a version of bash that is affected by the vulnerabilities identified by the Common Vulnerability and Exposures (CVE) IDs: CVE-2014-6271 and CVE-2014-7169.
Known Behaviors
This section lists caveats that describe known behaviors in Cisco NX-OS Release 11.0(1b), Release 11.0(1c), and Release 11.0(1d). Click the Bug ID shown in Table 6 to access the Bug Search Tool and see additional information about the bug.
The ACI fabric currently only supports learning 8 IP addresses per 1 MAC address.
The Cisco Nexus 9508 ACI-mode switch supports warm (stateless) standby where the state is not synched between the active and the standby supervisor modules. For an online insertion and removal (OIR) or reload of the active supervisor module, the standby supervisor module becomes active, but all modules in the switch are reset because the switchover is stateless. In the output of the show system redundancy status command, warm standby indicates stateless mode.
When a recommissioned APIC controller rejoins the cluster, GUI and CLI commands can time out while the cluster expands to include the recommissioned APIC controller.
If connectivity to the APIC cluster is lost while a switch is being decommissioned, the decommissioned switch may not complete a clean reboot. In this case, the fabric administrator should manually complete a clean reboot of the decommissioned switch.
Before expanding the APIC cluster with a recommissioned controller, remove any decommissioned switches from the fabric by powering down and disconnecting them. Doing so will ensure that the recommissioned APIC controller will not attempt to discover and recommission the switch.
IGMP Snooping Known Behaviors:
Multicast router functionality is not supported when IGMP queries are received with VxLAN encapsulation.
IGMP Querier election across multiple Endpoint Groups (EPGs) or Layer 2 outsides (External Bridged Network) in a given Bridge Domain (BD) is not supported. Only one EPG or Layer 2 outside for a given BD should be extended to multiple multicast routers if any.
The rate of the number of IGMP reports sent to a leaf switch should be limited to 1000 reports per second.
Unknown IP multicast packets are flooded on ingress leaf switches and border leaf switches, unless “unknown multicast flooding” is set to “Optimized Flood” in a BD. This knob can be set to “Optimized Flood” only for a maximum of 50 BDs per leaf.
If “Optimized Flood” is enabled for more than the supported number of BDs on a leaf, follow these configuration steps to recover:
– Set “unknown multicast flooding” to “Flood” for all BDs mapped to a leaf.
– Set “unknown multicast flooding” to “Optimized Flood” on needed BDs.
Related Documentation
This section lists the product documentation for the Cisco ACI.
This document is to be used in conjunction with the documents listed in the
“Related Documentation” section.
Cisco and the Cisco logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cisco and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. To view a list of Cisco trademarks, go to this URL: www.cisco.com/go/trademarks. Third-party trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. (1110R)
Any Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and phone numbers used in this document are not intended to be actual addresses and phone numbers. Any examples, command display output, network topology diagrams, and other figures included in the document are shown for illustrative purposes only. Any use of actual IP addresses or phone numbers in illustrative content is unintentional and coincidental.