HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 5.X Administrator Guide (AA-RVHWB-TE, September 2005)

Fabric OS 5.x administrator guide 219
1. Schedule an outage for all devices attached to the fabric.
2. Back up all data and verify backups.
3. Shut down all hosts and storage devices attached to the fabric.
4. Disable all switches in the fabric.
5. Change the PID format on each switch in the fabric.
6. Reenable the switches in the updated fabric one at a time.
In a core/edge network, enable the core switches first.
7. After the fabric has reconverged, use the cfgEnable command to update zoning.
8. Bring the devices online in the order appropriate to the SAN.
This usually involves starting up the storage arrays first and the hosts last.
9. For any devices manually bound by PID, bring the devices back online, but do not start applications.
Update their bindings and reboot again if necessary.
This might involve changing them to the new PIDs, or might (preferably) involve changing to WWN
binding.
10.For any devices bound by PID, reboot the device to rebuild the device tree (some operating systems
require a special command to do this, such as boot –r in Solaris).
11.For devices that do not bind by PID or have had their PID binding updated, bring them back up and
resume I/O.
12.Verify that all I/O has resumed correctly.
Hybrid update
It is possible to combine the online and offline methods for fabrics where only a few devices bind by PID.
Because any hybrid procedure is extremely customized, it is necessary to work closely with the SAN
service provider in these cases.
Changing to Core PID format
In Fabric OS release 4.2.0 and later, Native PID format is not supported; the default format is the Core
PID format.
In Fabric OS 3.1.2 and later, Core PID format is the default configuration.
In Fabric OS 2.6.2 and later, Native PID format is the default configuration.
Although the PID format is listed in the configuration file, do not edit the file to change the setting there.
Instead, use the CLI configure command. When you use the configure command, switch databases
that contain PID-sensitive information are updated. If you change the setting in the configuration file and
then download the edited file, the PID format is changed, but the database entries is not changed, and so
they are incorrect.
The following information maps the PID format names to the names used in the management interfaces.
Before changing the PID format, determine whether host reboots are necessary. The section ”Host
reboots” on page 214 summarizes the situations that might require a reboot. For example:
PID format name Management interface name
Native PID Switch PID address mode 0
Core PID Switch PID address mode 1
Extended Edge PID Switch PID address mode 2