GPU network ports
GPU Network Ports is a Region Networking page for system admins. Open it from Region Networking > GPU Network Ports.
The GPU Network Ports page shows GPU network port records in a central place. It helps you review port identity, network addressing, hardware mapping, and linked resources.
Use the GPU Network Ports page when you need to:
Review GPU network port records across the region.
Identify which VM uses a port.
See which node and GPU network switch are linked to a port.
Check addressing values such as port IP and peer IP.
Review hardware values such as MAC address, PCI device ID, ENI device index, and rail ID.
GPU network ports management
Open the page
Use this page when you need to review GPU network port records.
In the left menu, open Region Networking.
Select GPU Network Ports.
Review the list of existing GPU network port records.
Review the list
The current UI provides a list view with a column picker.
Open Region Networking > GPU Network Ports.
Review the default columns.
Use the column picker when you need optional audit fields.
Select a linked VM, node, or GPU network switch when you need more details about a related resource.
Empty page behavior
When no records exist, the page shows an empty-state message.
Open Region Networking > GPU Network Ports.
Check whether the page shows that no GPU Network Ports are defined.
Linked views
This page includes links to related resources.
Select the Associated VM link to open the related VM.
Select the Node link to open the related node.
Select the GPU Network Switch link to open the related GPU network switch.
The same GPU network port collection can also appear in a VM page under its Ports tab.
List view fields
The list shows these default columns:
Name
Shows the GPU network port record name. Use it to identify the port in the list.
Switch Port Name
Shows the port name on the GPU network switch side. Use it to match the record to the switch-facing port name.
Associated VM
Shows the name of the linked VM when one is resolved in the UI. Use it to identify which VM is associated with the port. This value is a link to the VM details page.
Node
Shows the linked node name when one is resolved in the UI. Use it to identify the node related to the port. This value is a link to the node details page.
Project
Shows the linked project name when one is resolved in the UI. Use it to identify the project that owns or contains the related resource.
GPU Network Switch
Shows the linked GPU network switch name when one is resolved in the UI. Use it to identify the switch related to the port. This value is a link to the GPU network switch page.
Port IP
Shows the IP address assigned to the GPU network port. Use it to review the port-side addressing value.
Peer IP
Shows the peer IP address for the port. Use it to review the paired addressing value.
MAC Address
Shows the MAC address saved for the GPU network port. Use it to verify the Layer 2 hardware address.
PCI Device ID
Shows the PCI device identifier saved for the port. Use it to relate the port record to the hardware device identifier.
ENI Device Index
Shows the ENI device index saved for the port. Use it to review the device index value associated with the port.
Rail ID
Shows the rail identifier saved for the port. Use it to review the rail value assigned to the port record.
You can also add these optional columns:
Created At
Shows when the record was created. Use it for audit and tracking work.
Updated At
Shows when the record was last updated. Use it for audit and tracking work.
ID
Shows the unique record ID. Use it when you need the exact identifier for a specific GPU network port record.
What is not available on this page
The current collection view exposes no row or page actions.
There is no verified add action on this page.
There is no verified modify action on this page.
There is no verified delete action on this page.
There is no verified single-entity details component wired into the Region Networking service for GPU Network Ports.
Recommended best practices
Use this page as a review and cross-reference tool. The UI exposes linked names for the VM, node, and GPU network switch, so it works well for tracing a port to related resources.
Check both addressing fields together. Port IP and Peer IP are most useful when reviewed as a pair.
Use hardware identifiers during troubleshooting. MAC Address, PCI Device ID, ENI Device Index, and Rail ID help you match an entry in the UI to lower-level inventory or diagnostics.
Use optional audit columns when needed. Created At, Updated At, and ID can help with record tracking.
Open related records from the links in the table. This is the fastest way to move from a port record to its associated VM, node, or GPU network switch.
Troubleshooting
The page does not appear in the menu
GPU Network Ports is part of the Region Networking menu for system administrators.
Confirm that you are using an account with system admin access.
Open Region Networking and check the left navigation again.
The list stays empty
An empty list can be normal when no records are defined.
Check whether the page shows that no GPU Network Ports are defined.
Refresh the page if you expect existing data.
Verify the related backend data source for GPU network ports.
A linked VM, node, or switch name is missing
The UI resolves related names from other models. A missing name can mean that the related resource was not resolved in the current data set.
Refresh the page and allow the data to load.
Check whether the related VM, node, project, or GPU network switch exists and is accessible.
Review the raw port fields that are still visible in the list.
You need to create or edit a GPU network port
The current Region Networking page is read-only in the verified UI.
Use this page to review records.
Use the related linked resources for more investigation.
Check whether port creation or update is handled in another workflow outside this page.