Users Guide

Using the RACADM Command Line Interface 171
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgNicGateway 192.168.0.120
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgNicUseDHCP 0
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSServersFromDHCP 0
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSServer1 192.168.0.5
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSServer2 192.168.0.6
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSRegisterRac 1
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSRacName RAC-EK00002
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSDomainNameFromDHCP 0
racadm config -g cfgLanNetworking -o cfgDNSDomainName MYDOMAIN
NOTE: If cfgNicEnable is set to 0, the DRAC 5 LAN is disabled even if DHCP is enabled.
DRAC Modes
The DRAC 5 can be configured in one of three modes:
Dedicated
•Shared
Shared with failover
Table 9-3 provides a description of each mode.
Table 9-3. DRAC 5 NIC Configurations
Mode Description
Dedicated The DRAC uses its own NIC (RJ-45 connector) and the BMC MAC address for network
traffic.
Shared The DRAC uses Broadcom LOM1 on the planar.
Shared with failover The DRAC uses Broadcom LOM1 and LOM2 as a team for failover. The team uses the
BMC MAC address.