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Dell VxRail Network Planning Guide

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Prepare data center routing services

Routing services that support connectivity to external services and applications, and end users are required for external networks. External networks include the VxRail external management network and any external-facing networks that are configured for VxRail.

A leaf-spine network topology in the most common use case for VxRail clusters. A single VxRail cluster can start on a single pair of switches in a single rack. When workload requirements expand beyond a single rack, expansion racks can be deployed to support the additional VxRail nodes and switches. The ToR switches which are positioned as a leaf layer, can be connected using switches at the adjacent upper layer or spine layer. If you use spine-leaf network topology to support the VxRail clusters in your data center, you can enable L3 routing services at either the spine or layer.

Figure 1. Layer 2/3 boundary at the leaf layer or spine layer. Layer 2/3 boundary at the leaf layer or spine layer
Layer 2/3 boundary at the leaf layer or spine layer

Routing services at the spine layer require the uplinks on the leaf layer are trunked ports, and pass through required VLANs to the switches at the spine layer. This topology enables the Layer 2 networks to span across all the switches at the leaf layer. This topology can simplify VxRail clusters that extend beyond one rack, because the Layer 2 networks at the leaf layer do not need Layer 3 services to span across multiple racks.

A drawback to this topology is scalability. Ethernet standards enforce a limitation of addressable VLANs to 4094, which can be a constraint if the application workload requires a high number of reserved VLANs, or if multiple VxRail clusters are planned.

Enabling routing services at the leaf layer overcomes this VLAN limitation. This option also helps optimize network routing traffic, as it reduces the number of hops to reach routing services. This option requires Layer 3 services to be licensed and configured at the leaf layer. Since Layer 2 VxRail networks terminate at the leaf layer, they cannot span across leaf switches in multiple racks.
NOTE:If your network supports VTEP, you can extend Layer 2 networks between switches in physical racks over a Layer 3 overlay network to support a multirack VxRail cluster.
Figure 2. VTEP tunneling between leaf switches across racks. VTEP tunneling between leaf switches across racks
VTEP tunneling between leaf switches across racks

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