HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 6.1.1 administrator guide (5697-0235, December 2009)
Fabric OS 6.1.1 administrator guide 161
Compatibility
Admin Domains can be implemented in fabrics with a mix of AD-capable switches and non-AD-capable
switches. The following considerations apply:
• In mixed-fabric configurations, the legacy switches allow unfiltered access to the fabric and its devices;
therefore, these legacy switches should be managed by the physical fabric administrator.
• You must zone all ports and devices from legacy switches in the AD0 root zone database.
• If you have legacy switches in your AD-activated fabric, you must ensure that all new AD resources have
enough interconnectivity so that they do not get isolated into subfabrics with a legacy subfabric
interposed in the middle, as shown in Figure 10.
Figure 10 Isolated subfabrics
Firmware upgrade considerations
The following scenario is for enterprise-class products only:
• If the primary and secondary CPs are running pre-Fabric OS 5.2.0 and HA state is synchronized, and
if firmwareDownload is used to upgrade one CP alone (using the firmwareDownload -s option), that CP
will run in a non-AD-capable mode (AD creation operations will fail and the local switch will show up
as a non-AD-capable switch in the fabric).
Admin Domain management for physical fabric administrators
This section is for physical fabric administrators who are managing Admin Domains. You must be a
physical fabric administrator to perform the tasks in this section.
• ”Setting the default zone mode” on page 162
• ”Creating an Admin Domain” on page 162
• ”Assigning a user to an Admin Domain” on page 163
• ”Activating and deactivating Admin Domains” on page 165
• ”Adding and removing Admin Domain members” on page 166
• ”Renaming an Admin Domain” on page 167
• ”Deleting an Admin Domain” on page 167
• ”Deleting all user-defined Admin Domains” on page 168
• ”Validating an Admin Domain member list” on page 168
Understanding the AD transaction model
Use the ad command to perform most of the tasks in this section. This command follows a
batched-transaction model, which means that changes to the Admin Domain configuration occur in the
transaction buffer.
An Admin Domain configuration can exist in several places:
• Effective configuration—The Admin Domain configuration that is currently in effect.
• Defined configuration—The Admin Domain configuration that is saved in flash memory. There
might be differences between the effective configuration and the defined configuration.
• Transaction buffer—The Admin Domain configuration that is in the current transaction buffer and
has not yet been saved or canceled.
AD-capable fabric AD-capable fabricnon-AD-capable
fabric
These two subfabrics have
different AD databases but
the same root zone database.