Networks Thread, 2 NICs in a Server in Technical; I'm thinking of putting an additional NIC (1GB) into a server which will bring the total tally to 2 NICs. ...
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29th July 2009, 12:36 AM #1 2 NICs in a Server
I'm thinking of putting an additional NIC (1GB) into a server which will bring the total tally to 2 NICs. I was wondering if I did this, and connected two ethernet cables, would it load balance the connection or would I need to do something fancy?
Also, what NIC would you recommend going into a HP ML350 G5 server? Preferably 1GB.
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IDG Tech News
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29th July 2009, 05:50 AM #2 Only if the two NICs are the same brand and the driver support channel bonding. Also your switch needs to support port trunking with the two ports the NICs are plugged into trunked/bonded.
I find Intel NICs particuarly good for this. In fact a 2-port NIC is not overly expensive...
Insight UK - Intel Gigabit ET Dual Port Server Adapter - Netw... - E1G42ETBLK
The standard you are looking for on your switch/nic/driver is IEEE 802.3ad
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29th July 2009, 06:26 AM #3 For load balancing you will need some extra software.
HP has their own network teaming software free avalible from their driver downloads page but you must be using all hp server grade network cards to enable this. Likewise the intel NIC software will only balance intel NICs.
You will want a propper server grade NIC anyway that has offloading so I would recommend having a chat to your hp reseller and getting another hp card. They do nice twinport ones to. They are much more expencive than a standard NIC but it is worth it from a speed and offloading prespective.
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29th July 2009, 08:17 AM #4 Dell and HP both have their own network card teaming software, it is fairly awesome as our server gets 2GBps uplink from it. Also if one goes down, its still on the network
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29th July 2009, 08:59 AM #5 I have to agree, if you wish to implement teaming or load balancing, Intel NICs are probably the best for this. It's also worth saying you need (preferably) a manageable switch to make the best of this technology too
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14th August 2009, 10:54 AM #6 I've just done this on a Proliant ML-110 and just want a bit of confirmation and reassurance I've done things right (I've got three more servers to do!):
1) Installed second card (HP HC110T) and latest drivers.
2) Given it a static IP address.
3) Put the IP address in the DHCP reservation.
3) Downloaded and Installed latest HP management software.
4) Enabled Teaming.
5) Plugged in cable.
It seems to be ok, but was I right in step 3? I put the reservation name down as MY-SERVER, which is same as the reservation made for the first card.
The server connects to a HP Procurve 4208 switch. The log of it was showing EXCESSIVE BROADCASTS for the first ten mins, but seems quiet now an hour on.
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14th August 2009, 11:12 AM #7 If you have installed the hp NCU and added both member cards to the team then you are most of the way there. It looks something like the screenshots here: Utilising 2 network cards In a Server
Anyhow the team actually only uses one ip address which is setup on the newly created HP Teamed adapter that shows up after you team them. There are several different types of team:
Network Fault Tolerance
Transmit Load Balancing with Fault Tolerance
Switch assisted Load Balancing with Fault Tolerance
Switch assisted Dual Channel Load Balancing
Your procurve will be able to support switch assisted configurations which will give you better bandwidth utilisation. This if I remember correctly the latest version of the NCU may even be able to set this up for you automaticly with hp switches.
http://www.brianmadden.com/blogs/gue...explained.aspx
http://www.howtonetworking.com/Networking/nicteam1.htm
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14th August 2009, 02:28 PM #8 Thanks for that, I didn't realise you didn't need to configure the second card. I'm amazed at how easy it all was!
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17th August 2009, 09:18 AM #9 You haven't specified what OS your using, although everyone has presumed Windows (and they are usually right), for completeness here's the Linux answer.
NIC load balancing (linux calls it bonding) comes as part of the kernel out of the box. So you don't need to go off and find any vendor tools.
Linux Ethernet Bonding Configuration -- Debian Admin
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