hp StorageWorks director 2/64 installation guide Part Number: AA-RSNGB-TE/958-000289-000 Second Edition (January 2003) This guide provides procedures for setting up, configuring, and managing the HP StorageWorks director 2/64.
© Hewlett-Packard Company, 2003. All rights reserved. Hewlett-Packard Company makes no warranty of any kind with regard to this material, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Hewlett-Packard shall not be liable for errors contained herein or for incidental or consequential damages in connection with the furnishing, performance, or use of this material. This document contains proprietary information, which is protected by copyright.
Contents About This Guide Intended Audience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi Related Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi Document Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xii Symbols in Text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Optional Kits. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1–13 2 Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Review Installation Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2–1 Items Required for Installation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2–2 Select an Operating Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Set Date and Time Manually . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Synchronize Date and Time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Frequently Used HAFM Settings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Set the Director Online . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Set the Director Offline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Connect the Director to a Fabric. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using HAFM from a Remote Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Remote Workstation Minimum Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Install HAFM Client on a Remote Workstation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Launch HAFM from the Remote Client . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents A Regulatory Compliance Notices Regulatory Compliance ID Numbers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A–1 Federal Communications Commission Notice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A–1 Class A Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A–2 Class B Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Glossary Index Figures 1–1 1–2 1–3 1–4 2–1 2–2 2–3 2–4 2–5 2–6 2–7 2–8 2–9 2–10 2–11 2–12 2–13 2–14 2–15 2–16 2–17 2–18 2–19 2–20 2–21 2–22 2–23 2–24 2–25 2–26 2–27 2–28 viii Director 2/64s and HAFM server in a cabinet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1–2 Director components—front . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1–9 UPM card LEDs and connectors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 2–29 2–30 2–31 2–32 2–33 2–34 2–35 2–36 2–37 2–38 2–39 2–40 2–41 2–42 2–43 2–44 2–45 2–46 2–47 2–48 2–49 2–50 2–51 3–1 3–2 3–3 3–4 3–5 3–6 3–7 3–8 3–9 3–10 3–11 3–12 3–13 4–1 4–2 Products View page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2–41 Hardware View page (with FRU failures) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2–43 Configure Date and Time dialog box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4–3 4–4 4–5 4–6 New Firmware Description dialog box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Modify Firmware Description dialog box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Backup and Restore Configuration dialog box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Send Firmware confirmation box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4–4 4–5 4–7 4–8 Tables 1 1–1 2–1 2–2 2–3 B–1 B–2 B–3 B–4 B–5 Document Conventions . . . . . . . . . .
About This Guide This guide provides information on installing, configuring, managing, and verifying operation of the HP StorageWorks Director 2/64. The Director 2/64 switch connects storage devices, hosts, and servers in a SAN. The director is easily managed and configured to optimize the performance of your SAN. Intended Audience This guide is part of a documentation set that supports the Director 2/64.
About This Guide Document Conventions The conventions included in Table 1 apply. Table 1: Document Conventions Element Convention Cross-reference links Blue text: Figure 1 Key names, menu items, buttons, and dialog box titles Bold File names, application names, and text emphasis Italics User input, command names, system responses (output and messages) Monospace font Variables Monospace, italic font Website addresses Sans serif font (http://thenew.hp.
About This Guide Symbols on Equipment Any enclosed surface or area of the equipment marked with these symbols indicates the presence of electrical shock hazards. Enclosed area contains no operator serviceable parts. WARNING: To reduce the risk of injury from electrical shock hazards, do not open this enclosure. Any RJ-45 receptacle marked with these symbols indicates a network interface connection.
About This Guide Any product or assembly marked with these symbols indicates that the component exceeds the recommended weight for one individual to handle safely. WARNING: To reduce the risk of personal injury or damage to the equipment, observe local occupational health and safety requirements and guidelines for manually handling material. Rack Stability WARNING: To reduce the risk of personal injury or damage to the equipment, be sure that: • The leveling jacks are extended to the floor.
About This Guide • Product serial numbers • Product model names and numbers • Applicable error messages • Operating system type and revision level • Detailed, specific questions HP Website The HP website has the latest information on this product, as well as the latest drivers. Access storage at: http://thenew.hp.com/country/us/eng/prodserv/storage.html. From this website, select the appropriate product or solution.
1 Overview This chapter contains the following HP StorageWorks Director 2/64 information: • Director Description, page 1–1 • Features, page 1–1 • Hardware Components, page 1–7 • Optional Kits, page 1–13 Director Description The director is a second-generation, 64-port product that provides dynamic switched connections between Fibre Channel servers and devices in a SAN environment.
Overview • 100-km distance support (60 buffers), with use of repeaters • Small form factor, hot pluggable optical transceivers, auto configure G_ports • Combination short-wave or long-wave laser transceivers • Redundant power supplies and fan modules • Online product repair for Field Replaceable Units (FRUs) • Periodic health check and enhanced system monitoring • Non-disruptive firmware load and update Director Management The director is managed and controlled through: • The HAFM applicatio
Overview checking is done for pre-existing conditions and no prompts display to guide users through tasks. Refer to the hp StorageWorks CLI reference guide for directors and edge switches. • A customer-supplied remote workstation communicating with the HAFM server through a corporate intranet. • A customer-supplied PC platform with a network connection to the EWS interface installed on the director.
Overview • Beaconing to assist service personnel in locating a specific port, FRU, or director in a multi-switch environment. When port beaconing is enabled, the amber LED associated with the port flashes. When FRU beaconing is enabled, the amber (service required) LED on the FRU flashes. When unit beaconing is enabled, the system error indicator on the front bezel flashes. Beaconing does not affect port, FRU, or director operation.
Overview CAUTION: If zoning is implemented by port number, a change to the director fiber-optic cable configuration disrupts zone operation and may incorrectly include or exclude a device from a zone. If zoning is implemented by WWN, removal and replacement of a device HBA or Fibre Channel interface (thereby changing the device WWN) disrupts zone operation and may incorrectly include or exclude a device from a zone. In Open Fabric mode, only zoning by WWN is supported. Zoning by port numbers is not.
Overview — Fabric A unzoned and Fabric B zoned—The fabrics join successfully, and fabric A automatically inherits the zoning configuration from fabric B. — Fabric A zoned and Fabric B zoned—The fabrics join successfully only if the zone configurations can be merged. If the fabrics cannot join, the connecting E_Ports segment and the fabrics remain independent.
Overview Hardware Components The director provides a modular design that enables quick removal and replacement of FRUs. The following sections define Director 2/64 main components. Front View Figure 1–1 shows Director 2/64 components accessible from the front of the director. Component descriptions follow the figure. 1 2 3 Power and system error LEDs UPM cards Power supplies 1. 4 5 6 Cable management assembly1 Front bezel CTP2 cards Provided in rack mount kits 9000/10000/11000 and M-Series only.
Overview CTP2 card serves as a backup. A CTP2 card provides an Initial Machine Load (IML) button on the faceplate. When the button is pressed and held for three seconds, the director reloads firmware and resets the CTP2 card without switching off power or affecting operational fiber-optic links. Each CTP2 card also provides a 10/100 megabit per second (Mbps) RJ-45 twisted pair connector on the faceplate that attaches to an Ethernet Local Area Network (LAN).
Overview Power Supplies The Director 2/64 uses redundant, load-sharing power supplies which step down and rectify facility input power to provide 48-VDC power to director FRUs. The power supplies also provide over-voltage and over-current protection. Either power supply can be replaced while the switch is powered on and operational. Each power supply has a separate backplane connection to allow for different AC power sources. The power supplies are input rated at 85 to 264 VAC.
Overview UPM 1 2 1 2 3 Card LED Port LEDs Port Connectors (G_Ports) 3 Figure 1–2: UPM card LEDs and connectors Single-mode or multimode fiber-optic cables attach to UPM cards through small form factor pluggable (SFP) optic transceivers. The fiber-optic transceivers provide duplex connectors, and can be detached from UPM cards (through a 10-pin interface) for easy replacement. Three fiber-optic transceiver types are available.
Overview • Extended reach long-wave Laser—Long-wave laser transceivers that provide connections for transferring data over extended long distances (up to 35 kilometers) through 9-µm single-mode fiber. Rear View Figure 1–3 shows the components accessible from the rear of the Director 2/64.
Overview SBAR Assembly The director ships with two SBAR assemblies. The active SBAR is responsible for Fibre Channel frame transmission from any director port to any other director port. Connections are established without software intervention. The assembly accepts a connection request from a port, determines if a connection can be established, and establishes the connection if the destination port is available. The assembly also stores busy, source connection, and error status for each director port.
Overview Optional Kits Contact your Hewlett-Packard authorized service provider to purchase the following optional Director 2/64 kits. See Table 1–1. Table 1–1: Director 2/64 Optional Kits Supporting Kit Description 2Gb UPM Port Module Kit, Part Number:A6574-87951 / DS-DMPMK-AA / 300833-B21 Provides 8 additional short-wave ports for the Director 2/64. 500m Optical Transceiver Kit, Part Number:DS-DMSHT-AA / 300834-B21 Provides short-wave optical transceiver for the Director 2/64.
2 Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 This chapter does the following: • Lists installation requirements • Provides a carton contents checklist • Outlines how to install the Director 2/64 in a HP 9000, HP 10000, HP 11000, HP M-Series, HP rack system/e, industry-standard 19-in rack, or comparable rack • Describes how to configure the Director 2/64 • Summarizes HA-Fabric Manager (HAFM) server set up and configuration Review Installation Requirements The Director is delivered stand-alone and
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 • Verify that there is space in the rack. The director is 9U (15.75 in) high. In addition, 1U is required in the HP rack system/e and industry-standard 19-in racks for the rail tray kit. Note that the tray provides 1U of space for cable management. • Verify that the rack is stable. • If applicable, obtain the necessary remote workstations or Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) workstations.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 • Null modem cable—An asynchronous RS-232 null modem cable is required to configure director network addresses and obtain event log information through the maintenance port. The cable has nine conductors and two DB-9 female connectors. A null modem cable specially designed for this application is supplied with the Director 2/64.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Unpack and Inspect the Director Unpack and inspect the director as follows: 1. Inspect the shipping container for damage caused during transit. 2. Unpack the shipping cartons. WARNING: The Director 2/64 weighs approximately 115 pounds. Use proper handling and lifting equipment to reduce the possibility of injury or product damage. 3.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 s.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Table 2–1: Shipping Carton Contents for an HP 9000/10000/11000 Rack 2–6 Number Item 1 One HP StorageWorks Director 2/64 Product CD containing firmware, license, documentation 2 hp StorageWorks director 2/64 installation guide 3 Two Power Distribution Unit (PDU) power cords 4 Two standard AC power cords 5 Four multimode, short-wave loopback plugs 6 One torque driver with integrated 5/32” bit 7 One 10-foot null modem cable 8 HP 9000/10000/11000
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 s.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Table 2–2: Parts for Installing in an HP Rack System/e and Industry-Standard 19-in Rack Label Item 1 HP StorageWorks Director 2/64 (part number: A6534-62001) 4 Rail Tray Kit (part number: A6534-60016): 2, 3, 5 • One Rail tray • Two mounting brackets • Two M3 Tinnerman nuts • Four Torx T25 16 mm M5 SEM screws Mounting hardware: • • Rack mount brackets (part number: A6534-60014) containing: • Two front mounting brackets (5) • Two rear mounting
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 • For a 9000/10000/11000 rack: — #2 Phillips screwdriver — Torx head driver T25 Tips for Installing More than One Switch Review the following tips: • Install the first director in the lowest position of the rack, allocated for switches. • If installing more than one switch, Hewlett-Packard recommends installing an optional PDU in the bottom of the rack. Hewlett-Packard ships two PDU power cords with the Director 2/64.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 9000/10000/11000 Rack Installation To install the director in an HP 9000/10000/11000 rack, complete the procedures in the following sections: • Install the Shelf Brackets in a 9000/10000/11000 Rack, page 2–10 • Prepare the Switch for Installation, page 2–11 • Finalize the Rack Mounting Procedure, page 2–13 Install the Shelf Brackets in a 9000/10000/11000 Rack Use these steps to install the two shelf brackets in the rack.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Prepare the Switch for Installation The following section describes how to install the mounting hardware that attaches the switch to the rails.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Secure the Mounting Hardware Use these steps to secure the mounting hardware to the switch. 1. Locate the two front mounting brackets in the shipping carton. 2. Secure the front mounting brackets on either side of the switch as shown in Figure 2–4. For each front mounting bracket, use the two flathead countersunk Phillips screws (10-32 x 0.25 in) provided. Figure 2–4: Securing the two mounting brackets 3. Using a torque driver, torque the screws to 22 in/lb.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Insert the Cage Nuts Read the following sections for instructions on inserting front and rear cage nuts in the rack. Insert the Front Cage Nuts in the Rack Use these steps to insert the six supplied cage nuts in the rack’s front rails: 1. Select one of the front rails. 2. Count up 11 square openings from the top screw of the shelf bracket, and insert the first of three cage nuts. 3.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 1. Carefully lift the switch into the front of the rack and onto the shelf brackets and slide the switch forward into the rack until the edge of the rear mounting plates are approximately 1-inch from the rack’s rails, as shown in Figure 2–5. 2. Align one rear angle bracket with the cage nuts installed earlier, as shown in “Insert the Cage Nuts” on page 2–13. NOTE: Make sure that the angle bracket is in contact with the outside surface of the mounting plate.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 6. If you are certain that the hardware lines up properly, secure the hardware as follows: a. Secure each rear mounting plate to the rear angle bracket with the two screws provided. b. Move to the front of the switch, and secure each front mounting bracket with the three screws provided. Figure 2–6: Securing the rear angle brackets 7. Using a torque driver, torque the screws to 22 in/lb. 8.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 WARNING: Hewlett-Packard power cords are provided for each director power supply. To prevent personal injury by electric shock, use only the supplied power cords. Also, verify that the facility power receptacle is the correct type, supplies the required voltage, and is properly grounded. 9. Connect the equipment rack power cords to separate (for redundancy) facility power sources, providing single-phase, 120 to 240 VAC current.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Install the Anti-tip Feet on an HP Rack System/e Rack Use the following procedure to mount anti-tip feet on an HP rack system/e rack only, as shown in Figure 2–8: 1. Place the anti-tip feet (1), provided in the HP rack system/e and industry-standard 19-in rack mount kits, on the front and rear of the rack base. 2. Secure the anti-tip feet (1) to the base of the rack (front and rear). 3. Lower the rack feet (2) until they touch the floor.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3. Locate the rail tray and two rail tray brackets in the shipping carton. Figure 2–9: Rail tray mounting location requirement 4. Position and attach both rear brackets, as shown in Figure 2–10: a. Locate the lowest U of the 9Us chosen for mounting the switch (the lowest being U1). b. Attach each rear rail tray bracket to the rear rack uprights at U1 (one on the left and one on the right. c. Secure each rail tray bracket using one M5 Torx screw.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3 1 2 3 Rear tray bracket M5 screw with attached lock washer HP rack 1 2 Figure 2–10: Attaching a rear rail tray bracket 5. Install a Tinnerman nut in the top holes of U1 for both the left and right rack-front uprights, as shown in Figure 2–11.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 6. Position the rail tray as shown in Figure 2–12 and insert the tray into the rack from the front. IMPORTANT: Make sure the slots in the sides of the rail tray slide over the posts on the rear rail tray brackets, and the posts on the rail tray’s front mounting flanges are inserted into the center holes of U1. Figure 2–12: Inserting the rail tray in the rack 7. Secure the rail tray: a.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 b. Slide a sheet metal nut (2) on each of the located holes. NOTE: Three sheet metal nuts should be on each front column face (3). Figure 2–13: Preparing the front rack columns 2. Prepare the rear rack columns, as shown in Figure 2–14: a. Standing at the back of the rack, count up from the top of the rail tray (1) to 12th and 28th on the rack’s back face. b. Slide a sheet metal nut (2) on each of the located holes.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–14: Preparing the rear rack columns Prepare the Switch for Installation The following section describes how to install the mounting hardware that attaches the switch to the rails. This hardware includes: • Two front mounting brackets • Two rear mounting plates • Eight 10-32, flat-head Phillips screws Use these steps to secure the mounting hardware to the switch, as shown in Figure 2–15: 1.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 4. Repeat step 2 and step 3 for the second front mounting bracket. Figure 2–15: Installing the rack mounting brackets on the switch 5. Locate the two rear mounting brackets in the shipping carton. 6. Position a rear mounting bracket (3) so that the bracket’s center holes (1) line up with the 1st and 3rd threaded holes on the back portion of the switch side. IMPORTANT: The slotted end (2) of the bracket should face toward the back of the switch. 7.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 WARNING: The Director 2/64 weighs approximately 115 pounds. Use proper handling and lifting equipment to reduce the possibility of injury or product damage. 1. Carefully position the switch in the front of the rack and onto the rail tray, and slide the switch back on the rails until the front mounting brackets are against the front rack columns. Figure 2–16 illustrates using a lifting jack to position the switch.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 b. Insert the screws (6) through the rear mounting bracket slots into the threaded nuts of the angle bracket. c. Insert a second set of screws (4) through the angle bracket and the rail column into the sheet metal nuts on the back rail (3). d. Repeat step a through step c for the other side at the back of the switch. e.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 WARNING: Hewlett-Packard power cords are provided for each director power supply. To prevent personal injury by electric shock, use only the supplied power cords. Also, verify that the facility power receptacle is the correct type, supplies the required voltage, and is properly grounded. 4. Connect the equipment rack power cords to separate (for redundancy) facility power sources, providing single-phase, 120 to 240 VAC current.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–18: Installing the sliding shelf brackets 6. Insert the shelf into the rack so that both rail rear slots (1) slide over the loose screws (2) on inside face of each bracket, as shown in Figure 2–19.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–19: Positioning the sliding shelf bracket on a rail rear slot 7. Make sure that the sliding shelf and rails are horizontal, as shown in Figure 2–20 at the rack front. 8. Push each of the rail front tabs (1) into the corresponding holes on the rack columns (2). 9. At the back of the rack, tighten the screws that attach the sliding shelf rails to the mounting brackets, as shown in Figure 2–19 (2).
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–20: Positioning the sliding shelf bracket at the rack front Recommended Cable Management Perform the following procedure after installing a switch, as shown in Figure 2–21: 1. Install two cable restraints (1) on each side of the rack in positions that will hold the Fibre Channel cables away from the power supply. 2. Form loose bundles of the installed Fibre Channel cables (2) on each side of the rack. 3.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–21: Recommended cable management Power-On Self Test Use the following steps to run a Power-On Self Test (POST): 1. Power on the PDUs (if used). 2. At the bottom rear of the director, set the power switch (circuit breaker) to the Up position. The director powers on. The following occurs during POST: 2–30 • Amber LEDs on both CTP2 cards and all universal port module (UPM) cards illuminate momentarily.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3. After successful POST completion, the green power LED on the front bezel, green LED on the active CTP2 card, and green PWR OK LEDs on both power supplies remain ON. 4. If a POST error or other malfunction occurs, refer to the hp StorageWorks director 2/64 service manual. Configure Director Network Information Use the following sections to configure the director’s network addressing scheme.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Changing the Director’s IP Address If multiple directors are installed, or a public LAN segment is used, network addresses must be changed to conform to the customer’s LAN addressing scheme. The following items are required to perform this task. • A local workstation (desktop or notebook computer) with: — Microsoft Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows XP, or Windows NT 4.0 operating system.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 1 2 Maintenance port RS-232 port 3 Null Modem cable Figure 2–22: Connecting the null modem cable between the director and a workstation 2. Connect the 9-pin end of the RS-232 modem cable to the maintenance port. 3. Connect the other cable end to a 9-pin communication port (COM1 or COM2) at the rear of the local workstation.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 4. Power on the workstation and establish a connection to the director using Windows HyperTerminal. 5. Configure the Port Settings parameters as follows: • Bits per second: 57600 • Data bits: 8 • Parity: None • Stop bits: 1 • Flow control: Hardware 6. Click OK. The HyperTerminal window displays. 7. At the > prompt, type the user-level password (the default is password) and press the Enter key. The password is case sensitive.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–23: HyperTerminal dialog box 9. To change director network addresses, type the following at the C> prompt and press Enter. ipconfig xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx.yyy.yyy.yyy.yyy.zzz.zzz.zzz.zzz The IP address format is xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx. The subnet mask format is yyy.yyy.yyy.yyy. The gateway address format is zzz.zzz.zzz.zzz. The octets xxx, yyy, and zzz are decimals from 0 through 255.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 LAN-Connect the Director Use these steps to connect the rack-mounted director to the Ethernet LAN segment. 1. Connect one end of an Ethernet cable to the RJ-45 connector on each CTP2 card, as shown in Figure 2–24. 1 2 Remote workstation 3 Ethernet hub or switch (customer 4 supplied) HAFM server Director 2/64 Figure 2–24: LAN-connect the director 2.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 • Setting up the HAFM server • Connecting the HAFM server to the LAN • Configuring the network addressing for the HAFM server • Setting HAFM server date and time • Creating HAFM user names and passwords Enabling HAFM to Manage the Director To manage a new director, it must be recognized by the HAFM application. Follow these steps to enable HAFM to recognize a new director: 1. Click the Product menu and choose New from the drop-down menu.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–26: Products View page Table 2–3: Director Operational States and Symbols Operational State Symbol Operational—Director-to-server communication has been established, the director is operational, and no failures are indicated. Degraded—Director-to-server communication has been established, but the director is operating in degraded mode and requires service. This condition is typical if a port or redundant FRU fails. Go to step 2.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Table 2–3: Director Operational States and Symbols (Continued) Operational State Symbol Failed—Director-to-server communication has been established, but the director failed and requires immediate service. Go to step 2. Status Unknown—The director status is unknown because of a network communication failure between the director and HAFM server. Go to step 2. 2. Double-click the Director 64 icon.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–27: Hardware View page (with FRU failures) Set Director Date and Time The Director 2/64 Product Manager log entries are stamped with the date and time received from the director. Use these steps to set the effective date and time for the director. NOTE: The director and HAFM synchronize at least once daily. 1. At the Hardware View page for the selected director, click the Configure menu. 2. Choose Date/Time from the drop-down menu.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3. Set director date and time manually, or set for periodic updates. For specific instructions, see the following sections: • Set Director Date and Time, page 2–40 • Synchronize Date and Time, page 2–42 Figure 2–28: Configure Date and Time dialog box Set Date and Time Manually Use these steps to set the director date and time manually. 1.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Synchronize Date and Time Use these steps to set the director to periodically synchronize date and time with HAFM. 1. At the Configure Date and Time dialog box, choose the Periodic Date/Time Synchronization check box. The Date and Time fields are greyed-out and not selectable. 2. Click Activate to enable synchronization and close the Configure Date and Time dialog box.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 • Configure Threshold Alerts, page 2–62 • Enable Embedded Web Server, page 2–69 • Enable Telnet, page 2–69 Set the Director Online When the director is set online, an attached device can log into the director if the port is not blocked. Attached devices can communicate with each other if they are configured in the same zone. Use these steps to set the director online: 1. Open HAFM. The Products View page displays. 2.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Configure Director Identification Perform this procedure to configure the director name, description, location, and contact person for HAFM. The information displays in multiple dialog boxes throughout the application. In addition, the Name, Location, and Contact variables configured in the Configure Identification dialog box correspond respectively to the SNMP variables sysName, sysLocation, and sysContact.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Configuring Switch Operating Parameters Use the procedures in this section to set parameters on the director for fabric operation through the Configure Switch Parameters dialog box. These operating parameters are stored in NV-RAM on the director. 1. The director must be offline to change Preferred Domain ID and Operating Mode parameters. Verify that the director is set offline. For instructions, refer to the “Set the Director Offline” on page 2–43.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Domain ID The domain identification is a value between 1 and 31 that provides a unique identification for the director in a fabric. A fabric director cannot contain the same domain ID as another director or their E_Ports will segment when they try to join. In the Configure Switch Parameters dialog box, a field is provided to enter a preferred domain ID and a check box is provided to enable this ID as an insistent domain ID.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 CAUTION: If a director with a duplicate domain ID exists in the fabric, both directors' E_Ports will segment when they try to join. Rerouting Delay Placing a check mark in the check box to the left of the Rerouting Delay option enables rerouting delay. This option is only applicable if the configured director is in a multiswitch fabric. The default state is enabled.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 NOTE: Changing the switch speed to 2 Gb/s with any 1 Gb/s FPM cards installed will cause the following warning/confirmation message to display: “All FPM ports will be held inactive while the switch is configured to 2 Gb/sec speed. Do you want to continue?” Operating Mode NOTE: To change this value, you must first set the director offline. Choose Set Online State from the Maintenance menu to display the Set Online State dialog box, then click Set Offline.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–31: Configure Fabric Parameters dialog box 3. Use information under “Fabric Parameters” to change settings as required for parameters in this dialog box. 4. After you change settings, click the Activate button. 5. Back up the configuration data when you are finished configuring the switch. 6. Set the director online. For instructions, see “Set the Director Online” on page 2–43.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 NOTE: Set the same value for R_A_TOV on all directors and edge switches in a multiswitch fabric. If the value is not the same on all units, the fabric segments. Also, the value for R_A_TOV must be greater than the value configured for E_D_TOV. E_D_TOV Adjust the E_D_TOV in tenth-of-a-second increments. An error condition occurs when an expected response is not received within the time limit set by this value. The default value is 20 tenths (2 seconds).
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 NOTE: We recommend you leave the switch priority setting as Default. If you are considering setting this value to something other than default, refer to the section on principal switch selection for multiswitch fabrics in the hp StorageWorks SAN high availability planning guide for details.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–32: Configure Ports check boxes c. Click the 10-100 km check box to enable extended distance buffering for a port. A check mark in the box indicates the extended distance operation up to 100 kilometers (through repeaters) is enabled. d. Click the LIN Alerts check box to enable or disable LIN alerts for a port. A check mark in the box indicates alerts are enabled.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 2. Use the vertical scroll bar as necessary to display additional port information rows (up to 64 ports). 3. Click Activate to save the configuration information and close the dialog box. If any port speed was changed, an information message box displays stating, “Port speed changes will temporarily disrupt port data transfers. Would you like to continue?” Click Yes to complete activation.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 b. Click the check box in the Write Authorization column to enable or disable write authorization for the trap recipient (default is disabled). A check mark in the box indicates write authorization is enabled. When the feature is enabled, a management workstation user can change the HAFM server’s sysContact, sysName, and sysLocation SNMP variables. c.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–34: Configure E-Mail dialog box a. Type the IP address or DNS host name of the SMTP server in the SMTP Server field. Use 64 or fewer alphanumeric characters. b. For the E-Mail Addresses fields, type the e-mail addresses of up to five recipients who should be informed of system events. Use 64 or fewer alphanumeric characters for each entry. 2. To enable e-mail transmission of configured addresses, click Enable E-Mail Event Notification.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 NOTE: These procedural steps are valid only for an initial installation. Several dialog boxes appearing in this procedure are configured only once per installation. To configure the call-home feature, complete the following instructions for Windows 2000: 1. Ensure an analog telephone cable is routed and connected to the modem. 2.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–36: Phone Number to Dial window 4. Choose Use dialing rules check box. 5. Enter information in the Area code, Phone number, and Country/region code fields, and then click Next. Figure 2–37: Connection Availability window 6. Choose For all users option, and then click Next.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–38: Ready to create your connection window 7. Enter the name of the connection, and then click the Finish button. The Connect dialog box displays. 8. Click Dialing Rules. The Phone and Modem Options dialog box displays. 9. Choose a location and click Edit. The Edit Location dialog box displays. 10. Click Calling Card, choose None, and then click OK twice to return to the Connect dialog box. 11.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 17. If remote dial-in support is to be provided, and if the phone line connected to the HAFM server is an outside line, configure the phone number used for dial-in. To configure the phone number, perform the following steps: a. Choose Start > Programs > Accessories, and then click Command Prompt. The Command Prompt window displays. b.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Configure and Enable the Proactive Services Call-Home via LAN Feature The HAFM server call-home feature provides automatic event notification to a support center for reporting director problems. In order to report events, this feature requires the HAFM server to have a valid LAN connection to a SANworks Management Appliance or other server running the HP Proactive Services software.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 NOTE: Rebooting the HAFM server does not adversely effect the operation of the director or fabric. 5. Verify that call-home event notification is enabled through the HAFM server. a. In the Products or Fabrics View page, choose Maintenance > Configure Call Home Event. The HAFM Configure Call Home Event notification dialog box displays. If a check mark displays in the check box, call home is enabled.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Figure 2–39: Test Remote Notification dialog box 3. Check the Call-Home and E-Mail check boxes. 4. Click Send Test. Call-home and e-mail test messages are transmitted and an Information dialog box displays. 5. Click OK. Verify that the intended users received the Call-Home and e-mail notifications.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 — The maximum cumulative time that the throughput percentage threshold can be exceeded during the set time interval before an alert is generated. • Ports for which you are configuring threshold alerts. You can configure up to 16 alerts, and any number of alerts can be active at one time. Use the following procedures to create a new threshold alert, or to modify, activate, deactivate, or delete an alert. Create New Alerts 1.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 2. Click New. The New Threshold Alert dialog box displays. Figure 2–41: New Threshold Alerts dialog box—first screen 3. Enter a name from one to 64 characters in length. All characters in the ISO Latin-1 character set, excluding control characters, are allowed. 4.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 5. Click Next. A new screen displays with additional parameters. The name configured for the alert displays at the top of the screen. NOTE: Click Previous if you need to return to the previous screen. Figure 2–42: New Threshold Alerts dialog box—second screen 6. Enter a percentage from 1 through 100 for % utilization. When throughput reaches this percentage of port capacity, a threshold alert will occur. 7.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 9. Click Next. A new screen displays for selecting ports for the alerts. Figure 2–43: New Threshold Alerts dialog box—third screen 10. Choose either Port Type or Port List. 2–66 • For Port Type, choose either E_Ports or F_Ports will cause this alert to generate for all ports configured as E_Ports or F_Ports respectively. • For Port List, you can choose individual ports by clicking the check box by each port number or set all ports.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 11. Click Next. A final screen displays to provide a summary of your alert configuration. Figure 2–44: New Threshold Alerts dialog box—summary screen 12. Click Finish. The Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box displays listing the name, type, and state of the alert that you just configured. 13. At this point, the alert is not active. To activate the alert, choose the alert information that displays in the Configure Threshold Alerts table and click Activate.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 Modify Alerts Use the following steps to modify an existing threshold alert configuration. 1. At the Hardware View page, choose Configure > Threshold Alerts. The Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box displays. Select the alert that you want to modify by clicking the alert information in the table. If the alert is active, an error message displays prompting you to deactivate the alert. 2.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3. If the alert is active, choose Deactivate to change to the inactive state. If the alert is inactive, choose Activate to change to the active state. Delete Alerts Use the following steps to delete existing threshold alerts. 1. At the Hardware View page, choose Configure > Threshold Alerts. The Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box displays. 2. Select the alert that you want to delete by selecting the alert information in the table and click Delete.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 . 1 2 Director 2/64 Fibre Channel cables 3 Workstation Figure 2–46: Connect the Fibre Channel cables 2. Connect device cables to ports and route the cables through the cable management assembly at the bottom front of the director. Start with the center UPM cards (cards 7 and 8) adjacent to the CTP2 cards and work outward. In addition, start with the bottom port of each UPM card and work upward. 3.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 2. Verify that the preferred domain ID for the director is unique and does not conflict with the ID of another director or switch participating in the fabric. To change the domain ID, see “Configure Fabric Operating Parameters” on page 2–48. 3. Verify that the R_A_TOV and E_D_TOV values for the director are identical to the values for all directors and edge switches participating in the fabric. 4.
Using HAFM from a Remote Location Use this section to install the HAFM client on a remote workstation. Remote Workstation Minimum Requirements The following minimum requirements must be met in order to install HAFM on a remote workstation. IMPORTANT: In order for HAFM to function properly, compatible versions must be installed on both the client and server machines.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3. At the browser, type the HAFM server IP address. 4. The HAFM splash screen displays with the following options, see Figure 2–48. a. Install HAFM remote client application—Choose this option to install the application for your workstation platform. b. Download SNMP MIB files—The Management Information Base (MIB) files are provided in standard ASN.1 syntax and may be installed into the MIB database of any SNMPv2 compliant Network Management Station.
Installing and Configuring the Director 2/64 3. Choose an HAFM server from the HAFM Server drop-down list. NOTE: The default user name is Administrator. The default password is password. Both user name and password are case sensitive. 4. Click Login. The Products View page displays.
3 Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 This chapter contains information on how to launch and configure the Embedded Web Server. The configuration portion defines specific Director 2/64 system settings, including: • Ports • Network addresses • Identification and contact information • Date and time • Operating parameters • SNMP settings • Passwords and user privileges. This chapter covers the initial set up of the Director 2/64.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 3. At the browser, enter the director IP address in the Uniform Resource Locator (URL) field. The Enter Network Password dialog box displays, as shown in Figure 3–1. 4. Type the default user name and password, or the user name and password assigned by the administrator. NOTE: The default user name is Administrator and the default password is password. The user name and password are case sensitive. 5. Click OK.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Figure 3–2: View page Configure Director Ports Use the following procedure to configure the names and settings for director Fibre Channel ports: 1. At the View page, choose the Configure option at the left side of the panel. The Ports page displays, as shown in Figure 3–3. Use the vertical scroll bar as necessary to display additional port information rows (up to 64 ports). a.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Figure 3–3: Ports page c. Click the check box in the 10-100 km column to enable extended distance buffering for a port (the default is disabled). A check mark in the box enables extended distance operation up to 100 kilometers (through repeaters). 2. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click Activate to save the information. The message “Your changes to the port configuration have been successfully activated” displays.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Use the following steps to configure the director identification: 1. At the Configure page, click the Director tab. The Identification page displays, as shown in Figure 3–4. Figure 3–4: Identification page a. Type a director name of 24 or fewer alphanumeric characters in the Name field. Configure each director with a unique name. If the director is installed on a public LAN, the name should reflect the director’s Ethernet network DNS host name.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Configure Date and Time Use this procedure to configure the director date and time: 1. At the Configure page, click the Director tab, then choose the Date/Time tab. The Date/Time Properties page displays, as shown in Figure 3–5. Figure 3–5: Date/Time Properties page a. Click the Date fields that require change. Type changes using the following ranges: Month (MM): 1 through 12 Day (DD): 1 through 31 Year (YYYY): greater than 1980 b.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Configure Operating Parameters Use this procedure to configure the following operating parameters: • BB_Credit • R_A_TOV • E_D_TOV • Preferred Domain ID • Interop Mode • Switch Priority • Rerouting Delay First, set the director offline as follows. 1. At the View page, select the Operations option at the left side of the panel. The Operations page opens with the Port Beaconing page displayed. 2. At the Operations page, click the Online State tab.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 4. Next, select the Configure option at the left side of the panel. The Configure page opens with the Ports page displayed. 5. Click the Director tab, then click the Parameters tab. The Parameters page displays, as shown in Figure 3–7. Figure 3–7: Parameters page Ordinarily, you do not need to change values in this page from their defaults. The only exception is the Preferred Domain ID. Change this value if the director will participate in a multiswitch fabric. 6.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Switch Parameters Configure the following parameters as required by your fabric. Domain ID The domain identification is a value between 1 and 31 that provides a unique identification for the director in a fabric. A fabric director cannot contain the same domain ID as another director or their E_Ports will segment when they try to join.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 • This option is required if Enterprise Fabric Mode (optional SANtegrity binding feature) is enabled. • If you enable Insistent Domain while the switch or director is online, the Preferred Domain ID will change to the current active domain ID if the IDs are different. CAUTION: If a director with a duplicate domain ID exists in the fabric, both directors' E_Ports will segment when they try to join.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Configure Fabric Operating Parameters Use procedures in this section to set parameters on the director for fabric operation through the Fabric Parameters page. These operating parameters are stored in NV-RAM on the director. First, set the director offline as follows. 1. At the View page, select the Operations option at the left side of the panel. The Operations page opens with the Port Beaconing page displayed. 2. At the Operations page, click the Online State tab.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Figure 3–9: Fabric Parameters page 6. Use information under “Fabric Parameters” to change settings as required for parameters in this dialog box. 7. After you change settings, click Activate. 8. Back up the configuration data when you are finished configuring the switch. 9. Return the director to online as follows. a. At the View page, select the Operations option at the left side of the panel. The Operations page opens with the Port Beaconing page displayed. b.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Fabric Parameters Configure the following parameters as required by your fabric. BB_Credit Configure the director to support buffer to buffer credit (BB_Credit) from 1 through 60. This is the value used for all ports, except those configured for extended distance buffering (10-100 km). The default value is 16. For a description of the buffer-to-buffer credit, refer to the industry specification, Fibre Channel Physical and Signaling Interface.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 If all directors are set to Principal or Default, the director with the highest priority and the lowest WWN becomes the principal director. Following are some examples of principal director selection when directors have these settings: • If you have three directors and set all to Default, the director with the lowest WWN becomes the principal director.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Configure Network Information Verify the type of LAN installation with the customer’s network administrator. If one director is installed on a dedicated LAN, network information (IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address) does not require change. If multiple directors are installed, or a public LAN segment is used, network information must be changed to conform to the customer’s LAN addressing scheme.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 c. Type the new value as specified by the customer’s network administrator in the Gateway Address field. (default is 0.0.0.0). 3. Click Activate to save the information. See Figure 3–11. Figure 3–11: Activate message box 4. Update the address resolution protocol (ARP) table as follows. a. Choose File > Close. The Windows desktop displays. b. At the Windows desktop, choose Start > Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Configure SNMP Trap Message Recipients Use this procedure to configure community names, write authorizations, and network addresses for up to 12 SNMP trap message recipients. A trap recipient is a management workstation that receives notification (through SNMP) if a director event occurs. 1. Launch EWS. See “Launch EWS” on page 3–1. 2. If network information was configured at the browser, go to step 3.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 b. Click the check box in the Write Authorization column to enable or disable write authorization for the trap recipient (default is disabled). A check mark in the box indicates write authorization is enabled. When the feature is enabled, a management workstation user can change sysContact, sysName, and sysLocation SNMP variables. c. Type the IP address or DNS host name of the trap recipient (SNMP management workstation) in the associated Trap Recipient field.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 Figure 3–13: User Rights page 2. For the Administrator set of data fields: a. Type the administrator user name (as specified by the customer’s network administrator) in the New User Name field. Use 16 or fewer alphanumeric characters. b. Type the administrator password (as specified by the customer’s network administrator) in the New Password field. Use 16 or fewer alphanumeric characters. c. Type the administrator password again in the Confirm New Password field.
Using EWS to Configure the Director 2/64 3. For the Operator set of data fields: a. Type the operator user name (as specified by the customer’s network administrator) in the New User Name field. Use 16 or fewer alphanumeric characters. b. Type the operator password (as specified by the customer’s network administrator) in the New Password field. Use 16 or fewer alphanumeric characters. c. Type the operator password again in the Confirm New Password field. 4. Click Activate to save the information.
4 Manage Firmware Versions The Director 2/64 internal operating code is downloaded from the HAFM server and stored on a CTP2 card. Up to eight versions can be stored on the HAFM server hard drive and made available for download to a director.
Manage Firmware Versions Figure 4–1: Firmware Library dialog box 4. The firmware version displays at the lower left corner of the dialog box in XX.YY.ZZ format, where: • XX is the version level • YY is the release level • ZZ is the patch level 5. Click Close. Add a Firmware Version The firmware version shipped with the director is provided on the Director 2/64 documentation CD. Subsequent firmware versions to upgrade the director are provided to customers through the Hewlett-Packard website.
Manage Firmware Versions Verify or correct the directory path specified in the Save in field and the file name specified in the File name field. d. Click Save. The new firmware version is downloaded and saved to the HAFM server or PC hard drive. e. If the new firmware version was downloaded to a PC (not the HAFM server), transfer the firmware version file to the HAFM server by Zip disk, CD-ROM, or other electronic means. 2. At the HAFM server, open the HAFM application. The Products View page displays. 3.
Manage Firmware Versions Figure 4–3: New Firmware Description dialog box 7. Enter a description (up to 24 characters in length) for the new firmware version and click OK. It is recommended the description include the installation date and text that uniquely identifies the firmware version. 8. A Transfer Complete message box displays indicating the new firmware version is stored on the HAFM server hard drive. Click Close to close the message box. 9.
Manage Firmware Versions 5. Enter a modified description (up to 24 characters in length) for the firmware version and click OK. It is recommended the description include the installation date and text that uniquely identifies the firmware version. 6. The new description for the firmware version displays in the Director Firmware Library dialog box. 7. Click Close. Delete a Firmware Version Use these steps to delete a firmware version from the library stored on the HAFM server hard drive: 1.
Manage Firmware Versions NOTE: When downloading a firmware version, follow procedural information in the release notes that accompany the firmware version. This information supplements information provided in this general procedure. Use these steps to download a firmware version to a director: 1. At the HAFM server, open the HAFM application. The Products View page displays. 2. Before downloading firmware version XX.YY.
Manage Firmware Versions 5. Choose Maintenance > Firmware Library. The Director Firmware Library dialog box displays, as shown in Figure 4–1. 6. Select the firmware version to be downloaded and click Send. The send function verifies existence of certain director conditions before the download process begins. If an error occurs, a message displays indicating the problem must be fixed before firmware is downloaded. Conditions that terminate the process include: • A redundant CTP2 card failure.
Manage Firmware Versions After the IPL, a “Synchronizing CTP2s” message displays. This message remains as files are transmitted to the second CTP2 card and the progress bar travels across the dialog box to 100%. When the download reaches 100%, a “Send firmware complete” message displays. 8. Click Close to close the dialog box. 9. Click Close. Back Up the director’s Configuration Use these steps to back up the configuration file to the HAFM server. 1. At the HAFM server, open the HAFM application.
A Regulatory Compliance Notices This appendix covers the following topics: • Regulatory Compliance ID Numbers, page A–1 • Federal Communications Commission Notice, page A–2 • IEC EMC Statement (Worldwide), page A–4 • Spécification ATI Classe A (France), page A–4 • Canadian Notice (Avis Canadien), page A–4 • European Union Notice, page A–4 • Japanese Notice, page A–5 • Taiwanese Notice, page A–5 • Harmonics Conformance (Japan), page A–6 • German Noise Declaration, page A–6 • Laser Safety
Regulatory Compliance Notices Federal Communications Commission Notice Part 15 of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Rules and Regulations has established Radio Frequency (RF) emission limits to provide an interference-free radio frequency spectrum. Many electronic devices, including computers, generate RF energy incidental to their intended function and are, therefore, covered by these rules.
Regulatory Compliance Notices • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. • Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. • Consult the dealer or an experienced radio or television technician for help. Declaration of Conformity for Products Marked with FCC Logo—United States Only This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules.
Regulatory Compliance Notices IEC EMC Statement (Worldwide) This is a Class A product. In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference, in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.
Regulatory Compliance Notices • EN55024 1998 (IEC61000-4-2, IEC61000-4-3, IEC61000-4-4, IEC61000-4-5, IEC61000-4-6, IEC61000-4-8, IEC61000-4-11)-Electromagnetic Immunity • EN60950 (IEC60950)-Product Safety • Power Quality: (IEC610000-3-2)-Harmonics and (IEC61000-3-3)-Voltage Fluctuations and Flicker • Also approved under UL 1950, 3rd Edition/CSA C22.2 No.
Regulatory Compliance Notices Harmonics Conformance (Japan) German Noise Declaration Schalldruckpegel Lp = 68.8 dB(A) Am Arbeitsplatz (operator position) Normaler Betrieb (normal operation) Nach ISO 7779:1988 / EN 27779:1991 (Typprüfung) Laser Safety WARNING: To reduce the risk of exposure to hazardous radiation: • Do not try to open the laser device enclosure. There are no user-serviceable components inside.
Regulatory Compliance Notices The OLM includes the following certifications: • UL Recognized Component (USA) • CSA Certified Component (Canada) • TUV Certified Component (European Union) • CB Certificate (Worldwide) The following figure shows the Class 1 information label that appears on the metal cover of the OLM housing.
Declaration of Conformity The Declaration of Conformity is shown on the next page.
B Technical Specifications This appendix contains the following information: • Physical Dimensions, page B–1 • Environmental Specifications, page B–2 • Power Requirements, page B–2 • Operating Tolerances, page B–2 • Laser Information, page B–3 Physical Dimensions Table B–1 lists director 2/64 dimensions. Table B–1: Dimensions Dimension Size Height 39.7 cm (15.7 in) Width 44.5 cm (17.5 in) Depth 54.6 cm (21.5 in) Weight 52.3 kg (115 lb) Shipping Weight 76.
Technical Specifications Environmental Specifications Figure B–2 lists environmental ranges for shipping, storing, and operating the HP StorageWorks director 2/64. Table B–2: Environmental Specifications Specification Shipping Storage Operating Weight 76.4 kg (168 lb) 52.3 kg (115 lb) 52.
Technical Specifications Table B–4: Operating Tolerances (Continued) Specification Value Shock and vibration tolerance 60 Gs for 10 milliseconds without nonrecoverable errors Acoustical noise 6.9 Bels Inclination 10° maximum Laser Information Three configurations of cards with fixed optics will be provided for each of the connector types: four extended long-wave ports, four long-wave ports, and four short-wave ports.
C Electrostatic Discharge This appendix contains the following information: • Precautions Against Electrostatic Discharge • Grounding Methods Precautions Against Electrostatic Discharge To prevent damaging the system, be aware of the precautions you need to follow when setting up the system or handling parts. A discharge of static electricity from a finger or other conductor may damage system boards or other static-sensitive devices. This type of damage may reduce the life expectancy of the device.
Electrostatic Discharge • Use heel straps, toe straps, or boot straps at standing workstations. Wear the straps on both feet when standing on conductive floors or dissipating floor mats. • Use conductive field service tools. • Use a portable field service kit with a folding static-dissipating work mat. If you do not have any of the suggested equipment for proper grounding, have a Hewlett-Packard authorized service provider install the part.
Glossary This glossary defines terms used in this guide or in other guides in this series, and is not a comprehensive glossary of computer terms. The following cross-references are used in this glossary: Contrast with. This refers to a term that has an opposite or substantively different meaning. See. This refers the reader to another keyword or phrase for the same term. See also. This refers the reader to additional information contained in another entry.
Glossary audit log Log summarizing actions (audit trail) made by the user. authentication Verification of identity for a person or process. backplane The backplane provides 48 VDC power distribution and connections for all logic cards. backup FRU When an active FRU fails, an identical backup FRU takes over operation automatically (failover) to maintain director and Fibre Channel link operation.
Glossary broadcast frames Data packet, also known as a broadcast packet, whose destination address specifies all computers on a network. See also multicast. buffer Storage area for data in transit. Buffers compensate for differences in processing speeds between devices. See also BB_Credit. CHPID See channel path identifier. call-home Product feature which enables the HAFM server to automatically contact a support center and report system problems.
Glossary Class 3 Fibre Channel service Provides a connectionless (not dedicated) service without notification of delivery or nondelivery between two N_Ports. Also known as datagram. community profile Information that specifies which management objects are available to what management domain or SNMP community name. concurrent maintenance Ability to perform maintenance tasks, such as removal or replacement of field-replaceable units, while a hardware product is operating.
Glossary CUP See control unit port. cyclic redundancy check System of error checking performed at both the sending and receiving station using the value of a particular character generated by a cyclic algorithm. When the values generated at each station are identical, data integrity is confirmed. DASD Direct access storage device such as a disk drive. datagram See Class 3 Fibre Channel service. default Pertaining to an attribute, value, or option that is assumed when none is explicitly specified.
Glossary DNS name Domain name system or domain name service. Host or node name for a device or managed product that is translated to an IP address through a domain name server. domain ID Number (1 through 31) that uniquely identifies a switch in a multi-switch fabric. A distinct domain ID is automatically allocated to each switch in the fabric by the principal switch. E_Port See expansion port. E_D_TOV See error-detect time-out value.
Glossary expansion port Physical interface on a Fibre Channel switch within a fabric, that attaches to an expansion port (E_Port) on another Fibre Channel switch to form a multi-switch fabric. See also segmented E_Port. explicit fabric login Data field size, supported by an F_Port, that is agreed upon during fabric login.
Glossary Fibre Channel fabric element Any device linked to a fabric. Information about these devices is recorded in a management information base (MIB) which can be accessed by fabric management software. Fibre Channel I/O controller A device that controls the embedded Fibre Channel port and configures the ports’ ASICs. field-replaceable unit Assembly removed and replaced in its entirety when any one of its components fails. firmware Embedded program code that resides and executes on the director.
Glossary HAFM See also HA-Fiber Manager. HBA See host bus adapter. high availability A performance feature characterized by hardware component redundancy (enabling non-disruptive maintenance). High-availability systems maximize system uptime while providing superior reliability, availability, and serviceability. hop Data transfer from one node to another node. homogeneous fabric A fabric consisting of only Hewlett-Packard products.
Glossary initial program load Process of initializing the device and causing the operating system to start. Initiated through a menu in the Product Manager, this option performs a hardware reset on the active CTP2 only. interface Hardware, software, or both, linking systems, programs, or devices. Internet protocol address Unique string of numbers (in the format xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx) that identifies a device on a network.
Glossary link incident Interruption to link due to loss of light or other causes. load balancing Ability to evenly distribute traffic over multiple interswitch links within a fabric. Load balancing on a director occurs automatically. logical unit number Also known as LUN.
Glossary MIB See management information base. multicast Delivery of a single transmission to multiple destination N_Ports. Can be one to many or many to many. All members of the group are identified by one IP address. multi-switch fabric Fibre Channel fabric created by linking more than one director or fabric switching device within a fabric. name server Program that translates names from one form into another. Domain name servers (DNS) translate domain names into IP addresses.
Glossary OLS See offline sequence. operating state (director) The operating states are described as follows: • Online—when the director is set online, an attached device can log in to the director if the port is not blocked. Attached devices can communicate with each other if they are configured in the same zone. • Offline—when the director is set offline, all ports are set offline. The director transmits the offline sequence (OLS) to attached devices, and the devices cannot log in to the director.
Glossary packet Logical unit of information (usually in the form of a data frame) transmitted on a network. It contains a header (with all relevant addressing and timing information), the actual data, and a trailer (which contains the error checking function, usually in the form of a cyclic redundancy check). password Unique string of characters known to the computer system and to a user who must specify it to gain full or limited access to a system and to the information stored within it.
Glossary Product Manager Application that implements the management user interface for the director. product name User-configurable identifier assigned to a managed product. Typically, this name is stored on the product itself. For the director, the product name can also be accessed by an SNMP manager as the system name. PSP bucket See preventive service planning bucket. R_A_TOV See resource allocation time-out value.
Glossary segmented E_Port E_Port that has ceased to function as an E_Port within a multi-switch fabric due to an incompatibility between the fabrics that it joins. See also expansion port. SEL System error light. serial crossbar assembly The serial crossbar assembly (SBAR) is responsible for Fibre Channel frame transmission from any director port to any other director port. Connections are established without software intervention. SNMP Simple network management protocol.
Glossary switch priority Value configured into each switch in a fabric that determines its relative likelihood of becoming the fabric’s principal switch. system services processor Controls the RS-232 maintenance port, the Ethernet port, and the operator panel of a Fibre Channel director. topology Logical and/or physical arrangement of stations on a network. trap Unsolicited notification of an event originating from a SNMP managed device and directed to an SNMP network management station.
Glossary warning message Indication that a possible error has been detected. See also error message and information message. wrap plug See loopback plug. world wide name Eight byte address that uniquely identifies a switch, or a node (end device), even on global networks. WWN See world wide name. zone Set of devices that can access one another. All connected devices may be configured into one or more zones. Devices in the same zone can see each other. Those devices that occupy different zones cannot.
Index 10/100 BaseT ethernet hub 1–1 9000 series rack installation 2–10 A AIX operating system 2–77 alerts, introduction 1–3 audience xi B backing up director configuration file 4–9 bb_credit 2–51, 3–13 beaconing, introduction 1–4 C cable management assembly 1–8 cables, FCC compliance statement A–3 call-home feature introduction 1–3 call-home feature, configuring 2–57 call-home via LAN feature 2–63 Canadian Notice (Avis Canadien) A–4 carton contents 2–5, 2–7 CE marking A–4 CFR, laser compliance 1–9 changi
Index adding version 4–2 deleting a version 4–6 downloading 4–6 version 4–1 document conventions xii documentation, related xi domain ID 1–5 insistent 2–48, 3–9 preferred 2–47, 3–9 domain RSCNs 2–49, 3–10 downloading firmware 4–6 E e_d_tov 2–51, 3–13 fabric segmentation 2–51, 3–13 incompatible parameters 1–6 less than r_a_tov 2–51, 3–13 multiswitch fabrics 2–51, 3–13 rerouting delay 2–48, 3–10 E_port segmentation preferred domain ID 2–47, 3–9 e_port segmentation 1–5 causes of 1–6 e_ports 1–9 electrostatic
Index grounding methods C–1 H HA PA-RISC processor 2–77 HAFM configuring ports 2–53 configuring SNMP trap message recipients 2–54 enabling e-mail notification 2–56 enabling to manage the director 2–37 remote location 2–76 remote location requirements 2–76 setting offline 2–44 setting the director online 2–44 HAFM server Fibre Alliance MIB 1–4 hard drives, remote workstation 2–77 help, obtaining xiv Hewlett-Packard authorized reseller xv technical support xiv website xv Hewlett-Packard rack installation 2–
Index operating 2–49 S/390 2–49 M-Series rack 2–8 multi-mode fiber-optic cables 1–10 multiswitch fabric 1–5 connectivity failures, causes of 1–5 degraded performance, causes of 1–5 domain IDs 1–5 e_d_tov 2–51, 3–13 e_port segmentation causes of 1–6 principal switch 2–51, 3–13 rerouting delay 2–48, 3–10 zoning 1–5 multiswitch fabric, e_ports 1–9 POST 2–30 power module assembly 1–12 power supplies 1–9 power supply requirements B–2 power switch 1–12 POWER3 microprocessor 2–77 power-on self test 2–30 PowerPC
Index SNMP agent general description 1–2 SNMP trap messages maximum recipients 1–4 Solaris operating system 2–77 SunOS operating system 2–77 switch error-detection, reporting, and serviceability features 1–3 multiswitch fabric 1–5 switch parameters domain RSCNs 2–49, 3–10 insistent domain ID 2–48, 3–9 NV-RAM storage 2–46, 2–49, 3–11 operating mode 2–49 preferred domain ID 2–47, 3–9 rerouting delay 2–48, 3–10 switch priority 2–51, 3–13 related number codes 2–52, 3–14 switch priority setting 2–52, 3–14 switc