User Guide hp StorageWorks Edge Switch Element Manager Product Version: FW v06.xx/HAFM SW v08.02.00 First Edition (July 2004) Part Number: AA-RV1NA-TE This guide describes how to use the Element Manager to configure, manage, and monitor the Edge Switch 2/24 and Edge Switch 2/32.
© Copyright 2004 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. 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.
Contents Contents About this Guide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Overview. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Intended Audience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Related Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Closing the Element Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Feature Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Required Permissions for Element Manager Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Backing Up and Restoring Element Manager Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . What is Backed Up?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Port Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Statistics Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Troubleshooting Tips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Button Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Configuring Threshold Alerts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Threshold Alert Configuration Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Creating New Alerts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Modifying Alerts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 6 Optional Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173 FICON Management Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174 Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174 Configuring the FICON Management Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 8 Node List View . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Performance View (Edge Switch 2/32) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 FRU List View . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . New Threshold Alerts dialog box - first screen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . New Threshold Alerts dialog box - second screen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . New Threshold Alerts dialog box - third screen (Edge Switch 2/24) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 10 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide
About this Guide About this Guide This user guide provides information to help you: ■ Configure and manageAbout the Edge Switch 2/24 and Edge Switch 2/32 this Guide ■ Access logs and maintenance information using the Element Manager ■ Install and manage optional features “About this Guide” topics include: ■ Overview, page 12 ■ Conventions, page 13 ■ Rack Stability, page 16 ■ Getting Help, page 17 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide 11
About this Guide Overview This section covers the following topics: ■ Intended Audience ■ Related Documentation Intended Audience This book is intended for use by system administrators who are experienced with the following: ■ Fibre Channel technology ■ StorageWorks Fibre Channel switches by Hewlett-Packard Related Documentation For a list of corresponding documentation included with this product, refer to the Related Documents section of the HP StorageWorks Edge Switch Release Notes.
About this Guide Conventions Conventions consist of the following: ■ Document Conventions ■ Text Symbols ■ Equipment Symbols Document Conventions This document follows the conventions in Table 1.
About this Guide Tip: Text in a tip provides additional help to readers by providing nonessential or optional techniques, procedures, or shortcuts. Note: Text set off in this manner presents commentary, sidelights, or interesting points of information. Equipment Symbols The following equipment symbols may be found on hardware for which this guide pertains.
About this Guide Power supplies or systems marked with these symbols indicate the presence of multiple sources of power. WARNING: To reduce the risk of personal injury from electrical shock, remove all power cords to completely disconnect power from the power supplies and systems. Any product or assembly marked with these symbols indicates that the component exceeds the recommended weight for one individual to handle safely.
About this Guide Rack Stability Rack stability protects personnel and equipment. WARNING: To reduce the risk of personal injury or damage to the equipment, be sure that: ■ The leveling jacks are extended to the floor. ■ The full weight of the rack rests on the leveling jacks. ■ In single rack installations, the stabilizing feet are attached to the rack. ■ In multiple rack installations, the racks are coupled. ■ Only one rack component is extended at any time.
About this Guide Getting Help If you still have a question after reading this guide, contact an HP authorized service provider or access our web site: http://www.hp.com. HP Technical Support Telephone numbers for worldwide technical support are listed on the following HP web site: http://www.hp.com/support/. From this web site, select the country of origin. Note: For continuous quality improvement, calls may be recorded or monitored.
About this Guide 18 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide
Element Manager Overview 1 This chapter is an introduction to the Element Manager that is used to manage the HP StorageWorks Edge Switch 2/24 and Edge Switch 2/32. It is intended as a quick reference for using features available through the main Element Manager window of the High Availability Fabric Manager (HAFM) application.
Element Manager Overview Feature Keys Feature keys verify ownership of the Element Manager and optional features that can be purchased for the Element Manager. The feature key, which is encoded with a switch’s serial number, can only be configured on the switch or director to which it is assigned. When you purchase additional Element Manager features, you receive a feature key. The feature keys that you are currently using are included in this key.
Element Manager Overview Managing the Edge Switch You can manage an edge switch through several different interfaces. These interfaces are as follows: ■ The Element Manager and HAFM Installed on HAFM appliance shipped from the factory or supplied by the customer. (You access the Element Manager through the HAFM application.
Element Manager Overview ■ Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). An SNMP agent is implemented through the Element Manager. It allows administrators on SNMP management workstations to access product management information using any standard network management tool. Administrators can assign Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and corresponding community names for up to six workstations functioning as SNMP trap message recipients.
Element Manager Overview Figure 1: HAFM appliance and remote client configuration (dual Ethernet) Using the Element Manager, you can: ■ Back up and restore configuration data. ■ Clear the system error indicator. ■ Configure Fibre Channel operating parameters for the fabric, such as R_A_TOV, E_D_TOV, switch priority, and interop mode. You can also configure Fibre Channel operating parameters for the switch, such as preferred and insistent domain ID, rerouting delay, and domain RSCNs.
Element Manager Overview 24 ■ Configure a nickname to display instead of the world wide name (WWN) for the switch and attached nodes. ■ Configure Port Binding and port speed. ■ Configure SNMP trap recipients and community names. ■ Configure Switch Binding if the optional SANtegrity Binding feature is installed. ■ Configure Open Trunking if the optional OpenTrunking feature is installed.
Element Manager Overview ■ Run port diagnostics. ■ Set the date and time on the switch. Note: You may perform configuration for some features through both the HAFM and the Element Manager. You must also enable Element Manager feature permissions for Administrative, Operator, and Maintenance user levels through the HAFM. When this guide refers to the HAFM for specific tasks, you should see the HAFM online help or the HP StorageWorks HA-Fabric Manager User Guide for detailed instructions.
Element Manager Overview Illustrations Used in this Manual Figures containing HAFM and Element Manager screens in this manual are included for illustration purposes only. These illustrations may not match exactly what you see through your server or workstation. Title bars have been removed from the illustrations, and fields in the illustrations may contain different data than in screens displayed on your system.
Element Manager Overview Menu bar View tabs View panel Status bar Figure 3: Element Manager window (Hardware View for the Edge Switch 2/24) Note: The HAFM window is still available as a separate window. You can drag the Element Manager window away from the other window and view both windows on your desktop, or you can minimize one or both of them to icons, if desired. You can have a maximum of four Element Manager windows open concurrently.
Element Manager Overview Window Layout and Function The main Element Manager window is divided into four main areas, as shown in Figure 3 on page 27: Menu bar, View tabs, View panel, and Status bar. You can use the features in these areas to configure switch operation, monitor performance, and access maintenance features.
Element Manager Overview Port This option provides a secondary port menu only when the Hardware View, Port List View, or Performance View displays in the View panel. To use this menu for a specific port, click a port in the Hardware View, a port’s row in the Port List View, or a port’s bar graph in the Performance View. The menu contains options which are identical to those that display when you right-click the port, port row, or port bar graph in those views.
Element Manager Overview Configure Menu Click Configure on the menu bar to display a menu that lists the following options. For detailed information on using these options, see “Configuring the Switch” on page 99. Identification Click this option to display the Configure Identification dialog box. Enter the following information in this dialog box: ■ Name—Enter a product name. Note that you can set this name as the nickname for the switch’s WWN, using the Set Name as Nickname check box.
Element Manager Overview ■ Click Fabric Parameters to display the Configure Fabric Parameters dialog box, which allows you to set parameters for fabric operation. In this dialog box, you can set the resource allocation time-out value (R_A_TOV) and error detect time-out value (E_D_TOV) in tenth-of-a-second increments. You can also set other fabric operating parameters, such as switch priority level (Principal, Default, or Never Principal) and interop mode.
Element Manager Overview SNMP Agent Click this option to display the Configure SNMP dialog box. Use this dialog box to configure network addresses and community names for up to six SNMP trap recipients. You can also authorize write permissions to enable SNMP management stations to modify writable Management Information Base (MIB) variables. In addition, you can enable authorization traps to be sent to management stations when unauthorized stations request access to switch SNMP data.
Element Manager Overview Threshold Alerts Click this option to configure threshold alerts for ports. A threshold alert notifies users when the transmit (Tx) or receive (Rx) throughput reaches specified values for specific switch ports or port types (E_Ports F_Ports, or FL_Ports). Using this option, you can configure: ■ A name for the alert. ■ A threshold type for the alert (Rx, Tx, or both). ■ Active or inactive state of the alert. ■ Threshold criteria.
Element Manager Overview Enable Telnet Click this option to enable telnet access to the switch. This puts a check mark in the box next to the menu option. Click the option again to clear the check mark and disable telnet access. When this option is disabled, users at remote workstations cannot access the switch through telnet to use the Command Line Interface (CLI). Logs Menu The Element Manager provides logs that show a record of various events that have occurred on the switch.
Element Manager Overview Link Incident Log The link incident (LIN) log displays the most recent incidents with their date and time, port number, and a description of the incident. A link incident can be one of several conditions detected on a fiber optic link. For a list of events that may cause a link incident to be written to the log, see “Link Incident Log” on page 157. This log includes link incidents from all group configuration elements.
Element Manager Overview IPL Click this option to initiate an Initial Program Load on the switch. A dialog box displays to allow you to confirm the IPL. Note that an IPL does not affect any configuration settings done through the Element Manager. This operation does not interrupt port operation. See the “Execute an IPL” on page 164 for more information. Set Online State Click this option to display the Set Online State dialog box.
Element Manager Overview For additional information on using this option, see “Enable E-Mail Notification” on page 167. Enable Call Home Notification Click Maintenance > Enable Call Home Notification to enable the call-home function for the switch. The parameters of the call-home feature are configured in Windows®. Refer to the HP StorageWorks HA-Fabric Manager Appliance Installation Guide for instructions.
Element Manager Overview Help Menu Click on the Help menu on the menu bar to display a list of the following options. Contents Click this option to display the Help window. The Help window opens with the Contents menu visible. You can click the Index pane or click the Search icon to conduct a search. The help text provides buttons and hypertext—linked items to help you quickly navigate through information.
Element Manager Overview View Panel Views, selected from the View tabs, display under the tabs in the View panel. Hardware View The Hardware View is the default view that displays in the View panel the first time you open a switch’s Element Manager. To return to this view from another view, click the Hardware tab. See Figure 4 for an example of this view. Figure 4: Hardware View In the Hardware View, colored indicators reflect the status of actual LEDs on the switch FRUs.
Element Manager Overview Switch Menu Double-click the switch graphic, away from a FRU, to display the Switch Properties dialog box. Right-click a hardware graphic, away from a FRU, to display the following options: ■ Properties ■ Enable Unit Beaconing ■ Clear System Error Light ■ IPL ■ Date and Time ■ Set Online State For details on menu options, see “Switch Menu” on page 69. For details on navigating and monitoring via the Hardware View, see “Hardware View” on page 56.
Element Manager Overview Port List View Click the Port List view tab. The Port List View displays. This view contains a table of data on all Fibre Channel ports in the switch. This data includes the port number, port name, blocked configuration state, operational state (such as online or failed), type of port, and any alerts. Figure 5 shows an example of the Port List View. Figure 5: Port List View The Port List View displays information about all ports installed in the switch.
Element Manager Overview Right-click a port row to display the same menu options that display when you right-click a port in the Hardware View or a port’s bar graph in the Performance View. These include: ■ Port Properties ■ Node Properties ■ Port Technology ■ Block Port ■ Enable Beaconing ■ Port(s) Diagnostics ■ Clear Link Incident Alert(s) ■ Reset Port ■ Port Binding ■ Clear Threshold Alert(s) These options are also available when you click a port row and then click Product > Port.
Element Manager Overview Figure 6: Node List View Double-click a port row to highlight it and display the Node Properties dialog box for that port. Right-click a port row to display the following menu options: ■ Node Properties—Displays the Node Properties dialog box. ■ Port Properties—Displays the Port Properties dialog box. ■ Define Nickname—Displays the Define Nickname dialog box, in which you can define a nickname to display for the attached device instead of the device’s 8-byte WWN.
Element Manager Overview ■ Display options—Allows you to display attached devices listed under the Port WWN column in the Node List View by the device’s nickname, configured through the Define Nickname menu option or the device's WWN. These options are also available when you click a port row and then click Product > Port. For details on navigating and monitoring via the Node List View, see “Node List View” on page 79. Performance View Click the Performance view tab.
Element Manager Overview When an end device (node) is logged into a port, moving the mouse pointer over the port’s bar graph in the Performance View highlights the graph and displays a message with the WWN of the connected node. If the connected node has more than one port, this is the WWN of the specific port on the node. The following types of messages display: ■ E_Port—Occurs when a port is functioning as an expansion port (E_Port).
Element Manager Overview For details on menu options, see “Port Menu” on page 72. The bottom portion of the Performance View displays cumulative statistical information for the port selected in the bar graph. Values are displayed for cumulative port statistics; error count values for a port, including traffic statistics, Class 2 and 3 accounting statistics; operational statistics; and error statistics.
Element Manager Overview Figure 8: FRU List View Double-click a row to display the FRU Properties for the selected FRU. For details on navigating and monitoring via the FRU List View, see “FRU List View” on page 91. Status Bar The status bar is located along the bottom of the Element Manager window. This includes a symbol that displays at the left side of the bar, and messages that display in the panel to the right of the symbol.
Element Manager Overview Table 2: Switch Status Symbols Symbol Status Bar Switch Status Table Text Meaning Green Circle Fully Operational All components and installed ports are operational; no failures. Yellow Triangle Redundant Failure A redundant component has failed, such as a power supply, and the backup component has taken over operation. Minor Failure A failure occurred which has decreased the switch operational ability. Normal switching operations are not affected.
Element Manager Overview Closing the Element Manager To close the Element Manager, use the following methods: ■ Click Product > Close. ■ Click the X button at the top right corner of the Element Manager window. ■ Double-click the icon at the top left corner of the Element Manager window, or right-click the icon and click Close from the menu that displays. Feature Permissions The system administrator can allow users access to specific functions of Element Manager features through HAFM.
Element Manager Overview Required Permissions for Element Manager Features Table 3 itemizes specific functions available to Element Manager users who have been assigned Device Administration, Device Operation, and Device Maintenance permissions. Note that the user must also be assigned read/write access to perform functions that modify data or configurations. If a user does not have permission to perform a specific operation, a not-authorized error box displays when the operation is attempted.
Element Manager Overview Table 3: Permissions Required for Feature Functions (Continued) Element Manager Rights Device Administration Configure Switch Parameters X Configure Fabric Parameters X Modify Port Binding X Configure Open Trunking X Configure Ports X Configure SNMP X Configure Switch Binding X Configure Threshold Alerts X Configure Zoning X Device Operation Device Maintenance X Data Collection X Date/Time Sync Configuration X X X Enable Call Home Notification X X En
Element Manager Overview Table 3: Permissions Required for Feature Functions (Continued) Element Manager Rights Device Administration View Event Log Device Operation Device Maintenance X X View Firmware 52 X View Hardware Log X X X View LIN Log X X X View Open Trunking Log X View SNMP X X X View Threshold Alert Log X X X X Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide
Element Manager Overview Backing Up and Restoring Element Manager Data You can protect your data by backing it up and then restoring it as necessary. What is Backed Up? The following data, contained in the \Server, \Client, and \Call Home directories, are backed up to disk: Note: refers to the directory where the HAFM application is installed. ■ All log files. ■ Zoning library (all zone sets and zone definitions).
Element Manager Overview Backing Up to a CD The rack-mount HAFM appliance is backed up to a compact disk, rewritable (CD-RW). As long as a CD-RW disk remains in the CD recorder drive of the HAFM appliance, critical information from both the Element Manager and the HAFM are automatically backed up to the CD-RW disk when the data directory contents change or when you reboot HAFM.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch 2 This chapter describes how to use the features available in the Element Manager View panel to monitor and manage switch operation. These features include status indicators, menu options, and dialog boxes available through the Hardware View, Port List View, FRU List View, Node List View, and Performance View.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Hardware View The Hardware View is the default view when you open the Element Manager. If another view displays, you can display the Hardware View by clicking the Hardware view tab on the Element Manager window. Using this graphical view of the switch, you can view status symbols and simulated light emitting diode (LED) indicators.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ State—The State field displays one of the following: — Offline—When the switch is “OFFLINE,” all ports are offline. The ports cannot accept a login from an attached device or cannot connect to other switches. You can configure this state through the Set Online State dialog box. See “Set Online State” on page 166 for instructions. — Online—All unblocked ports are able to connect with devices. You can configure this state through the Set Online State dialog box.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch — Protocol Mismatch—The switch and the HAFM appliance are not at compatible software release levels. Update the HAFM software version or your product’s firmware so that they are at compatible levels. — Duplicate Session—A link has previously been established between the switch and another instance of the HAFM appliance. Connect to the previously established HAFM appliance from the HAFM login screen.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Monitoring Hardware Operation You can determine hardware component operating status and states by viewing the simulated light emitting diode (LED) indicators and status symbols, such as flashing red and yellow diamonds and yellow triangles, that display on hardware components. These simulated LEDs and status symbols reflect the state of the actual hardware as changes occur.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Front View 1 Port Attention Indicator The yellow triangle ( ) on the port connector graphic indicates that a link incident occurred or that the port is not operational, in nonstandard mode of operation, or has other status. You can determine the reason for a link incident by displaying the Port Properties dialog box for the port. For details on status symbols, see Table 4 on page 93. For information on link incidents, see “Link Incident Alerts” on page 96.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch 6 Power, System Error, and Unit Beaconing Indicators The green or amber indicators on the far left of the front view simulate the power and system error LEDs on the actual switch. — Power Indicator. The green indicator (PWR) simulates the power LED on the actual switch. When the indicator illuminates, the switch is connected to facility AC power and is operational. The indicator will be on if either power supply is operating. — System Error Indicator.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Obtaining Hardware Information The Element Manager enables you to display FRU information, port properties, and switch properties using the various dialog boxes available on the Hardware View. Displaying FRU Information Display the FRU Properties dialog box using one of the following methods: ■ Double-click on a FRU, such as a power supply module illustrated in the Hardware View. ■ Click an FRU in the Hardware View, then click Product > FRU > FRU Properties.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Click on a connector, port row, or bar graph in the preceding views or click Product > Port > Port Properties. Figure 11: Port Properties dialog box (Edge Switch 2/32) Port Properties Parameters The Port Properties dialog box provides the following information in each of the listed fields: ■ Port Number—The physical port number. ■ Port Name—User-defined port name or description. See “Configuring Ports” on page 115 for instructions.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Operating Speed—Displays the current data speed for the port as 1 Gig, 2 Gig, or Not Established. Not Established displays if Negotiate was set for the port through the Configure Ports dialog box and the data speed has not been resolved between the port and the attached device, or if the port and device are not communicating. ■ Port WWN—The port’s 16-digit World Wide Name (WWN). ■ Attached Port WWN—The WWN of the node logged into the port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Reason—When the port operating state is Segmented E_Port, Invalid Attachment, or Inactive, this field displays the reason for that state. When an E_Port is segmented, two fabrics are prevented from joining. This only occurs when the switch is connected to another switch.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch — 11 Unresponsive node connected to port. Possible causes are: — Hardware problem on switch or on a connected node where ELP frames are not delivered, the response is not received, or a fabric login (FLOGI) cannot be received. There may be problems in the switch SBAR. — Faulty or dirty cable connection. — Faulty host bus adapters that do not send out FLOGI within a reasonable time frame. — 0x0C ESA Security Mismatch.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Segmented E_Port Messages: — Incompatible operating parameters, such as resource allocation time-out values (R_A_TOV) or error-detect time-out values (E_D_TOV) are inconsistent—See “Configuring Operating Parameters” on page 101 for more information. — Duplicate domain IDs—See “Configuring Operating Parameters” on page 101 for more information.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Displaying Switch Information Double-click the switch illustration (near to, but not on, a hardware component) to display the Switch Properties dialog box, as shown in Figure 12. Figure 12: Switch Properties dialog box (Edge Switch 2/32) The following information displays in this dialog box: 68 ■ Name—Switch Name, description, location, and contact configured through the Configure Identification dialog box.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ FC Address Domain—The switch’s Fibre Channel address (hexadecimal). ■ CTP State—Either Active or Failed. ■ Switch Speed—This is always set to 2 Gig. ■ Switch Binding— Displays Enabled if the optional SANtegrity Binding features are installed and enabled. Otherwise, displays Disabled.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ IPL—Click this option to initiate an IPL on the switch. When the dialog box displays confirming the IPL, click Yes. Note: An IPL is not intended for ordinary or casual use and should only be performed when directed by your support personnel. See “Execute an IPL” on page 164 for detailed procedures. ■ Date/time—To set the display and configure the date and time: 1. Click Date/Time to display the Configure Date and Time dialog box, as shown in Figure 13.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch 2. Perform one of the following steps: — To immediately synchronize the switch date and time with the HAFM appliance, make sure the Periodic Date/Time Synchronization option is enabled and then click Sync Now. Note: If you enable the Periodic Date/Time Synchronization feature and click Activate, the time will synchronize at the next update period.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch 2. Click the Set Offline or Set Online button to toggle between the states. Figure 15: Set Online State dialog box (switch is offline) Figure 16: Set Online State dialog box (switch is online) 3. When the Set Online or Set Offline warning dialog box displays, click OK to set the switch online or offline. As the switch goes offline, the word OFFLINE displays in the State field in the left corner of the Hardware View.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Speed—This will be either 1Gbit per second or 1 Gbit, 2 Gbit per second. ■ Block Port —Click this option to display a check mark and block port transmission. If the port is blocked, a node attached to the port is prevented from logging into the switch or communicating with other devices attached to switch ports. A blocked port continuously transmits offline signals (OLSs). Click to remove the check mark and unblock the port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Port Binding—Click this option to display the Port Binding dialog box (Figure 17). Use this dialog box to allow a device with a specific WWN or nickname to have exclusive connection to a port. Figure 17: Port Binding dialog box Use the Port Binding dialog box to set the following options: — Port Binding—Click this check box to place check mark in the box and enable Binding for the port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Detached WWN—Click this button and enter a WWN in the proper format (xx.xx.xx.xx.xx.xx.xx.xx) or a nickname configured through the Product or HAFM. The device with this WWN or nickname will have exclusive communication privileges through the port if Port Binding is enabled. Note the following: — If you do not enter a valid WWN or nickname in this field, but the Port Binding check box is checked (enabled), then no devices can communicate over the port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Port List View Display the Port List View (Figure 19) in the View panel by clicking the Port List view tab on the Element Manager window. Figure 19: Port List View Port List View Parameters The Port List View displays a table with columns. The columns display information on all ports that can be installed in the switch. This display is updated automatically.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Block Config—Indicates the blocked or unblocked configuration of the port, as set through the Configure Ports dialog box. The Block Port option is available by right-clicking the port in the Hardware View, the port row in the Port List View, or the port bar graph in the Performance View. Or, you can click Product > Port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Type—The type of port: — If the Port State is online, the available port types are F_Port, FL_Port, and E_Port. — If the Port State is not online, the available port types are the configured types: Gx_Port, G_Port, Fx_Port, F_Port, and E_Port. ■ Operating Speed—This column indicates the speed at which the port is operating. Possible values are 1 Gb/sec, 2 Gb/sec, and Not Established.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Node List View Display the Node List View by clicking the Node List view tab on the Element Manager window. This view displays, in table format, information about all node attachments to F_Ports and FL_Ports on the switch, sorted by port number. All data is dynamic and updates automatically as devices log in and log out.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Node Type (Edge Switch 2/24 only)—The node type: — N_Port—The switch port is operating as an F_Port. — NL_Port—the switch port is operating as an FL_Port ■ Port WWN—The port WWN of the attached node (N_Port). The 16-digit WWN is a set of unique numbers assigned to the device attached to the port. The WWN is prefixed by the manufacturer’s name of the host bus adapter that attaches to the device.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Double-click a row to display the Node Properties dialog box. For an explanation of the fields on the Node Properties dialog box, see “Displaying Node Properties” on page 82. Note: Private loop devices do not log into the fabric and do not provide any additional information other than their Arbitrated Loop Physical Address (ALPA) for private loop devices. The Port WWN field displays Not Logged In and the Unit Type field is blank for all private loop devices.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Displaying Node Properties Open the Node Properties dialog box by double-clicking a row in the Node List View or right-clicking a row and clicking Node Properties. Figure 21: Node Properties dialog box The Node Properties dialog box contains the following options: 82 ■ Port Number—The physical port number on the switch to which the node is connected. ■ Node Type—The type of port, as supplied by the attached port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Buffer to Buffer Credit—The buffer-to-buffer credits that the attached node has available. These credits determine the maximum number of frames a port can transmit without receiving a receive ready signal from the receiving device. ■ Class of Service—This can be Class 2, Class 3, or both. ■ Data Field Size—The largest size of Fibre Channel frame that the node will process. The size is negotiated with the attached device.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Performance View Display the Performance View by clicking the Performance view tab in the Element Manager window. This view displays a bar graph at the top of the view for each port. The lower portion of the view displays statistical values for the specific port’s bar graph that you select. Figure 22: Performance View Performance View Menu Options Right-click any of the port bar graphs to display a menu with the following port-related action options.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Bar Graph Display The Performance View provides a graphical display of performance for all ports. Each bar graph in the upper portion of the View panel displays the percentage of link utilization for the port. This information updates every five seconds. A red arrow marks the highest utilization since the opening of the Performance View. If the system detects activity on a port, it represents minimal activity with one bar.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Statistics Description The Statistics Values tables contain statistics in the following groups. To refresh tables with the latest data, click the Refresh button on the upper right portion of the Statistics Values panel, or click the port’s bar graph. Clear all counters for all users using the Clear button. Class 2 Statistics The Class 2 Statistics table includes: ■ Received Frames—The number of Class 2 frames received by this port from its attached port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Discarded Frames—The number of Class 3 frames discarded, including multicast frames with bad destination identifiers (D_IDs). The switch increments this count when it discards a frame that cannot be routed. This occurs most frequently when a destination becomes unavailable without the source realizing that the destination is unavailable. There are no thresholds for this value.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Some number of invalid transmission words are expected and acceptable. Invalid transmission words within a frame are used to produce the bit-error threshold link incident. If one or more invalid transmission words are detected in 12 separate 1.5-second samples within 5 minutes, a bit-error threshold link incident is generated. ■ CRC errors—A received frame failed a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) validation, indicating that the frame arrived at the switch’s port corrupted.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch ■ Link resets Tx—The number of link reset protocol frames received/transmitted by this port from/to the attached device. The switch transmits a link reset to initiate the link reset protocol or recover from a link timeout. This occurs normally to establish BB_Credit on any port in order to recover lost BB_Credit. ■ LIPS detected—A loop initialization primitive was detected, which means the loop was completed.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Troubleshooting Tips As a general rule, you should clear all counts after the system is stabilized. When looking at the Performance View, roughly keep track of the time interval when errors accumulate to judge the presence and severity of a problem. Also, recognize that there is a link recovery hierarchy implemented in Fibre Channel to handle some level of “expected anomalies.” In general, only be concerned with error counts that increment very quickly.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch FRU List View Display the FRU List in the main panel by clicking the FRU List view tab on the Element Manager window. This view displays information about all installed FRUs on the switch. All data is dynamic and updates automatically as the software detects changes. Figure 23: FRU List View Information on the FRU List View for each FRU includes: ■ FRU Name—Control Processor (CTP), Cooling Fan, and Power Supply Module.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch You can display the FRU Properties dialog box for a specific FRU by using one of the following methods: 92 ■ Double-click on the FRU row. ■ Click a row in the FRU List View and then click Product > FRU > Properties.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Port Operational States Table 4 describes the port operational states and the LED and attention indicators that display in the Hardware View and Port List View. Table 4: Port States and Indicators Port State Green/Blue Port Indicator Amber Port Indicator Alert Indicator Description Beaconing Off or On Blinking Yellow Triangle The port is beaconing. The amber port LED blinks once every two seconds to enable users to find a specific port.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Table 4: Port States and Indicators (Continued) Port State Green/Blue Port Indicator Amber Port Indicator Alert Indicator Description Not Operational Off Off Yellow Triangle The switch port is receiving the Fibre Channel not operational sequence (NOS) indicating that the attached device is not operational.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Table 4: Port States and Indicators (Continued) Port State Testing Not Installed Green/Blue Port Indicator Amber Port Indicator Alert Indicator Description Off Blinking Yellow Triangle Port is executing an internal loopback test. On Blinking Yellow Triangle Port is executing an external loopback test. Note: For any loopback test, the amber LED blinks (beacons) to help users locate the port under test.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Link Incident Alerts A link incident is a problem detected on a fiber optic link, like the loss of light, invalid sequences, and other problems. When a problem occurs, a LIN alert is sent to the Link Incident Log in the switch Element Manager. LIN alerts warn you that there is a link incident being detected through a port connection that may require operator intervention to correct.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch Threshold Alerts A threshold alert notifies Element Manager users when the transmit (Tx) or receive (Rx) throughput reaches specific values for switch ports or port types [E_Ports, F_Ports, or FL_Ports (Edge Switch 2/24 only)]. Click Configure > Threshold Alerts to display the Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box. Use this dialog box to configure criteria for generating a threshold alert.
Monitoring and Managing the Switch 98 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide
Configuring the Switch 3 This chapter describes how to configure the Edge Switch 2/24 or Edge Switch 2/32. It also includes information about backing up and restoring configuration data.
Configuring the Switch Configuring Identification Use the procedure in this section to identify the switch by its name, description, location, and contact person. This information displays in the following Element Manager locations: ■ Element Manager window title panel (name). ■ The Switch Properties dialog box (name, location, contact, description). ■ Identification table at the top of the Hardware View (name, location, description).
Configuring the Switch 5. Click in the Location field and enter the location of the switch of up to 255 characters. 6. Click in the Contact field and enter up to 255 characters of appropriate information about a contact person, such as a phone number, title, or e-mail address. 7. Click Activate to save the data and close the dialog box. 8. If you are finished configuring the switch, back up the configuration data. For more information, see “Backup and Restore Configuration” on page 168.
Configuring the Switch 2. Click Configure > Operating Parameters > Switch Parameters. The Configure Switch Parameters dialog box displays. Figure 25: Configure Switch Parameters dialog box Note: Ordinarily, you do not need to change values in this dialog box from their defaults. The only exception is the Preferred Domain ID. Change this value if the switch will participate in a multiswitch fabric. 3.
Configuring the Switch The preferred domain ID must be unique for each switch in a fabric. If two switches have the same preferred domain ID, the E_Ports segment, causing the fabric to segment. Insistent Click the Insistent check box to remove or add a check mark. The default state is disabled (no check mark). When a check mark displays, the domain ID configured in the Preferred Domain ID field will become the active domain identification when the fabric initializes.
Configuring the Switch Domain RSCNs Use this check box to enable domain register for state change notifications (domain RSCNs). Domain RSCNs are sent between end devices in a fabric to provide additional connection information to host bus adapters (HBAs) and storage devices. As an example, this information might be that a logical path has been broken because of a physical event, such as a fiber optic cable being disconnected from a port.
Configuring the Switch Configuring Fabric Parameters The Configure Fabric Parameters dialog box enables you to configure the Fibre Channel operating parameters. To set fabric parameters: Note: The switch must be offline to change parameters in this dialog box. If it is not and you activate values in this dialog box, a dialog box displays, prompting you to set the unit offline. Caution: Setting the switch offline terminates all Fibre Channel connections. 1. Set the unit offline: a.
Configuring the Switch 3. Use information under “Fabric Parameters” on page 106 to change settings as required for parameters in this dialog box. 4. After you change settings, click the Activate button. Fabric Parameters Configure the following parameters as required by your fabric. BB_Credit (Edge Switch 2/32 only.) Buffer-to-buffer credit. This variable is used to set the maximum number of frames a port can transmit without receiving a receive ready signal from the receiving device.
Configuring the Switch Switch Priority Setting this value determines the principal switch for the multiswitch fabric. Click either Principal (highest priority), Default, or Never Principal (lowest priority) from the Switch Priority drop-down list. If all switches are set to Principal or Default, the switch with the highest priority and the lowest WWN becomes the principal switch.
Configuring the Switch Interop Mode Choose one of the following modes: ■ Homogeneous Fabric—Choose this mode if the fabric contains only HP directors and switches that are operating in Homogeneous Fabric mode. ■ Open Fabric 1.0—Default. Choose this mode if the fabric contains HP directors and switches, as well as other open-fabric compliant switches. Choose this mode for managing heterogeneous fabrics.
Configuring the Switch Adding a Preferred Path To add a new Preferred Path, use the following steps: Caution: Activation of a new Preferred Path causes a reroute to occur if the Preferred Path is different from the current path. In congested environments, with traffic on the current path, a reroute can cause an out of order frame (OOOF) at the destination device. Reroutes are a natural activity in any Fibre Channel fabric when the network is modified.
Configuring the Switch The Preferred Paths dialog box contains the following columns: Note: Some columns may only display when the FICON Management Style feature has been installed. ■ Source Port—Lists the source port of the Preferred Path. ■ Source Addr—(Only displays when using FICON Management Style.) Lists the source address of the Preferred Path. ■ Exit Port—Lists the exit port of the Preferred Path. ■ Exit Addr—(Only displays when using FICON Management Style.
Configuring the Switch 3. Click the drop-down lists for Source Port, Exit Port, and Destination Domain ID to make your choices. See “Configuring a Preferred Path” on page 108 for more information. Tip: You can also type in an exit port number for future or offline environments. 4. Choose the Enable Preferred Paths check box in the Configure Preferred Paths dialog box to enable the configured preferred paths.
Configuring the Switch Specifying Preferred Path Example Figure 29 on page 113 displays a portion of a more complex SAN. This section provides a description of the activities related to specifying a Preferred Path for that SAN. In this example, we will do the following: ■ Specify a path between the Source Device and Destination Device A, going through Switch1, Switch 2, and Switch 3 (the desired data flow is shown as Data Flow 1). ■ Enter data through port 14. ■ Exit data through port 45.
Configuring the Switch The primary choice for data movement will be from the Source Device in port 14 and out port 45 on Switch 1, in port 11 and out port 21 on Switch 2, and through Switch 3 to either Destination Device A or B.
Configuring the Switch Figure 30: Specifying Preferred Path for Switch 2 The following rules apply when configuring Preferred Paths: ■ The switch’s domain ID must be set to Insistent. ■ Domain IDs must be in the range of 1 through 31. ■ The specified numbers for Source Ports and Exit Ports must be in the range equal to the number of ports for the switch being configured. ■ For any source port, only one path may be defined to each destination domain ID.
Configuring the Switch Configuring Switch Binding For complete procedures on configuring this optional feature, see “SANtegrity Features” on page 178. Configuring Ports The Configure Ports dialog box enables you to configure ports. Port configuration data is stored in NV-RAM on the switch.
Configuring the Switch ■ LIN Alerts—A link incident (LIN) is a problem detected on a fiber optic link, such as the loss of light or invalid sequences. When a problem occurs, a LIN alert is sent to the Link Incident Log in the switch Element Manager. LIN alerts warn you that there is a link incident being detected through a port connection. Place or remove check marks in the check boxes in this column to enable or disable link incident alerts. The factory default is to enable LIN alerts.
Configuring the Switch ■ Port Binding —Click this check box to display a check mark and enable Port Binding for the port. This allows only a specific device to attach to the port. This device is specified by the WWN or nickname entered into the Bound WWN column. With the check box cleared, any device can attach to the port, even if a WWN or nickname is specified in the Bound WWN column. Port Binding is allowed only for a port that is either a G_Port, E_Port, F_Port, or FL_Port.
Configuring the Switch 2. Click a Name field and type a name that reflects the end device connected through the port. For example, use XYZ Server, where XYZ is the brand name of the server. 3. Block or unblock operation for a port by clicking the check box in the Blocked column. When a check mark displays, the port is blocked. 4. (Edge Switch 2/32 only.) Enable or disable extended distance buffering for the port by clicking a check box in the 10-100 km column.
Configuring the Switch 10. Use the scroll bar on the right side of the Configure Ports dialog box table to display additional ports that you want to configure. 11. Activate changes and close the dialog box by clicking Activate. 12. If you are finished configuring the switch, back up the configuration data. For more information, see “Backup and Restore Configuration” on page 168. Configure Ports Procedure (Open Systems Management Style) Note: This procedure applies only to the Edge Switch 2/32.
Configuring the Switch 3. Block or unblock operation for a port by clicking the check box in the Blocked column. When a check mark displays, the port is blocked. 4. Enable or disable extended distance buffering for the port by clicking the check box in the 10-100 km column. When a check mark displays, extended distance buffering is enabled. 5. Enable or disable LIN alerts for the port by clicking the check box in the LIN Alerts column. When a check mark displays, LIN alerts are enabled.
Configuring the Switch Configure Ports Procedure (FICON Management Style) Note: This procedure applies only to the Edge Switch 2/32. FICON Management Style is not available on the Edge Switch 2/24. To configure Edge Switch 2/32 ports in FICON management style, use the following steps: 1. Click Configuration > Ports. The Configure Ports dialog box displays. Figure 33: Configure Ports dialog box (FICON Management Style) Ports are numbered from 0 through 31. 2.
Configuring the Switch 4. To bind a device with a specific WWN or nickname to the port, click the Port Binding check box to display a check mark. Then enter the WWN or configured nickname for the device into the Bound WWN column. The device that you bind to the port will have exclusive connection to that port.
Configuring the Switch Configuring Port Addresses (FICON Management Style) Use the Configure Address - “Active” dialog box (see Figure 35 on page 125) to create and activate port address configurations. Note: This procedure applies only to the Edge Switch 2/32. FICON Management Style is not available on the Edge Switch 2/24. Port Address Parameters The Configure Addresses - “Active” dialog box contains the following parameters: ■ Addr—This read-only field lists the port address.
Configuring the Switch Move your mouse pointer over the squares in the array to display the corresponding address. Right-click on the array to display the following menu options: — Prohibit row—Prohibits connection between all addresses in a row. In effect, this prohibits connection between a specific address and all other port addresses. — Allow row—Allows connection for all port addresses on a row that are currently prohibited.
Configuring the Switch Configure Port Addresses Procedure To configure, save, and activate port addresses, use the following steps: 1. Click Configure > Addresses > Active. The Configure Addresses - “Active” dialog box displays, as shown in Figure 35. 2. Click a square to either prohibit or allow connections,. Caution: Take extreme care when configuring PDCMs for E_Ports, as mistakes can render paths unusable and cause complex routing problems.
Configuring the Switch 4. Click the Port Name field and enter a name. Names must be between 1 and 8 characters in length. Valid characters are uppercase A-Z, 0-9, hyphen (-), and underscore (_). The name may not be CON, AUX, COMn (where n=1-49), LPTn (where n=1-39), NUL, or PRN. 5. Click in the CUP Name field and enter a name (optional). Names must be between 1 and 24 characters. All characters in the ISO Latin - 1 character set are allowed, except for control characters.
Configuring the Switch 2. Choose a configuration entry by clicking on the row. Then use one of the following procedures. ■ To modify a stored configuration: Click Modify. The Configure Addresses dialog box displays for the configuration. For details on using this dialog box, see “Configuring Port Addresses (FICON Management Style)” on page 123. ■ To delete a stored configuration: Click Delete. A warning displays before deletion.
Configuring the Switch Configuring an SNMP Agent Use the procedures in this section to: ■ Configure the SNMP agent that runs on the switch and implements the following MIBs: — MIB-II — Fabric Element MIB — Fibre Alliance (FCMGMT) MIB — Switch private MIB Note: For complete information on objects defined in MIBs, and steps to download MIB variables to your SNMP workstation, refer to the HP StorageWorks SNMP Reference Guide for Directors and Edge Switches.
Configuring the Switch To configure SNMP traps and assign community names, use the following steps: 1. Click Configure > SNMP. The Configure SNMP dialog box displays, as shown in Figure 37. Figure 37: Configure SNMP dialog box 2. Click Enable Snmp Agent to enable or disable an SNMP agent. SNMP agents allow administrators on SNMP management workstations to access product management information using any standard network management tool. 3.
Configuring the Switch 7. Enter the IP address for a trap recipient (SNMP management station) by clicking in the Trap Recipient column and entering an IP address. Note: In most cases, step 8 is not necessary. If you do not wish to override the default UDP number, skip to step 9. 8. Enter user datagram protocol (UDP) port numbers in the UDP Port Number column. You can override the default UDP port number of 162 with any legal UDP port number (1 to 65535). 9.
Configuring the Switch Configuring a Feature Key Feature keys verify ownership of the Element Manager and optional features that can be purchased for the Element Manager. The feature key, which is encoded with a switch’s serial number, can only be configured on the switch to which it is assigned. A feature key is a string of alphanumeric characters consisting of both uppercase and lowercase characters. The following is an example of a feature key format: XxXx-XXxX-xxXX-xX.
Configuring the Switch 2. Click Configure > Features. The Configure Feature Key dialog box displays. Figure 38: Configure Feature Key dialog box 3. Click New to add a new feature key. 4. In the New Feature Key dialog box, enter the switch’s feature key and click OK. — Feature keys are only valid for a switch with a specific serial number. They cannot be interchanged between switches.
Configuring the Switch Figure 39: Enable Feature Key dialog box 5. Click Activate to activate the new feature key. An IPL will occur, during which the Ethernet connection between the HAFM appliance and switch is momentarily interrupted. This will not disrupt Fibre Channel traffic. Note: If you click Activate, all current features will be replaced with new features.
Configuring the Switch Click Activate on the Enable Feature Key dialog box to activate the new feature key. An IPL will occur, during which the Ethernet connection between the HAFM appliance and director is momentarily interrupted. This will not disrupt Fibre Channel traffic. Note: If you click Activate, all current features will be replaced with new features.
Configuring the Switch Configuring Date and Time Use the procedures in this section to display and change the date and time set on the switch. You must set the current date and time on the switch using this dialog box so that the correct time stamps display in the Event Log, Audit Log, Hardware Log, Link Incident Log, and Threshold Alerts Log. Set the switch date and time using the following steps: 1. Click Configure > Date/Time. The Configure Date and Time dialog box displays, as shown in Figure 41.
Configuring the Switch 2. Click the Date fields that require change, and type numbers in the following ranges: Month (MM): 1 through 12 Day (DD): 1 through 31 Year (YYYY): greater than 1980 3. Click the Time fields that require change, and type numbers in the following ranges: Hour (HH): 0 through 23 Minute (MM): 0 through 59 Second (SS): 0 through 59 4. Click Activate to set the director date and time, and close the Configure Date and Time dialog box.
Configuring the Switch ■ Click Sync Now to synchronize the switch and HAFM appliance immediately. The Date and Time Synced dialog box displays. — Click OK. — In the Configure Date and Time dialog box, click Activate to enable synchronization and close the Configure Date and Time dialog box. Configuring Threshold Alerts A threshold alert notifies users when the transmit (Tx) or receive (Rx) throughput reaches specified values for specific switch ports or port types, (E_Ports, F_Ports, or FL_Ports).
Configuring the Switch ■ Threshold criteria: — Percent traffic capacity utilized. This is the percent of the port’s throughput capacity achieved by the measured throughput. This setting constitutes the threshold value. For example, the value of 50 means that the port’s threshold is reached when throughput is 50% of capacity. — Time interval during which throughput is measured and alert notification can occur.
Configuring the Switch 2. Click New. The New Threshold Alert dialog box displays, as shown in Figure 45. Figure 45: New Threshold Alerts dialog box - first screen 3. Enter a name from 1 to 64 characters in length. All characters in the ISO Latin-1 character set, excluding control characters, are allowed. 4. Click one of the following on the drop-down list in the Name field: ■ Transmit. An alert will occur if the threshold set for transmit throughput is reached. ■ Receive.
Configuring the Switch Figure 46: 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. Enter the amount of cumulative minutes in which the % utilization should exist during the notification interval before an alert is generated. You can also click At any time if you want an alert to occur whenever the set % utilization is reached.
Configuring the Switch Figure 47: New Threshold Alerts dialog box - third screen (Edge Switch 2/24) 10. Click either Port Type or Port List. ■ If you click Port Type, clicking either E_Ports, F_Ports, or FL_Ports will cause this alert to generate for all ports configured as E_Ports, F_Ports, or FL_Ports respectively. ■ If you click Port List, you can choose individual ports by clicking the check box by each port number or you can click Set All Ports.
Configuring the Switch Figure 48: 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 alerts that you just configured. 13. At this point, the alerts are not active. To activate the alerts, click the alert information that displays in the Configure Threshold Alerts table and click Activate.
Configuring the Switch Modifying Alerts Use the following steps to modify an existing threshold alert configuration. 1. Click Configure > Threshold Alerts. The Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box displays. 2. Choose the alert that you want to modify by clicking the alert information in the table. 3. If the alert is active, click Deactivate, then choose the alert information in the table again. 4. Click Modify. An initial Modify Threshold screen displays where you can change the threshold type. 5.
Configuring the Switch 3. If the alert is active, click Deactivate to change to the inactive state. If the alert is inactive, click Activate to change to the active state. Viewing Alerts Use the following steps to view existing threshold alerts. 1. Click Configure > Threshold Alerts. The Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box displays. 2. Choose the alert that you want to view by selecting the alert information in the table. 3. Click View.
Configuring the Switch Configuring Open Trunking This option is only available if the optional OpenTrunking feature is installed and the firmware is version 06.01.00 or higher. Choosing this option opens the Configure Open Trunking dialog box. For details on enabling OpenTrunking and configuring such parameters as congestion thresholds for ports, event notification options, and the Low BB Credit Threshold, see “Open Trunking” on page 187.
Configuring the Switch To export a configuration report: 1. Click Configure > Export Configuration Report. The Export Configuration Report dialog box displays. 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 Details List Create new folder 4 5 6 Home Go up one level Drive list Figure 50: Export Configuration dialog box 2. Click the folder where you want to save the file. 3. Type in a file name and extension in the File name field. 4. Click Save. The file saves to the specified folder as an ASCII text file.
Configuring the Switch Enabling Telnet 1. At the Hardware View, click Configure > Enable Telnet. Choosing Enable Telnet automatically places a check mark in the check box. 2. Click Enable Telnet again to remove the check mark and disable Telnet access. When disabled, remote users cannot access the director through Telnet.
Configuring the Switch 148 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide
Using Logs 4 This chapter describes the Edge Switch logs that you can access through the Logs menu on the Element Manager menu bar: ■ Log Options and Functions, page 150 ■ Audit Log, page 152 ■ Event Log, page 154 ■ Hardware Log, page 156 ■ Link Incident Log, page 157 ■ Threshold Alert Log, page 159 ■ Open Trunking Log, page 160 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide 149
Using Logs Log Options and Functions The Audit, Event, Hardware, Link Incident, and Threshold Alert logs store up to 1000 entries each. The most recent entry displays at the top of the log. After 1000 entries are stored, new entries overwrite the oldest entries. Using Buttons The following buttons work the same way for all logs: ■ Close—Clicking the Close button closes the log and displays the switch Element Manager window.
Using Logs 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 Details List Create new folder 4 5 6 Home Go up one level Drive list Figure 51: Save dialog box—log windows 2. In the Save dialog box, click the folder where you want to save the file. 3. Type in a file name and extension in the File name field. 4. Click Save. The file saves to the specified folder as an ASCII text file. Expanding Columns Expand columns in logs by placing the mouse pointer over the line between column headings until a double arrow displays.
Using Logs Audit Log The Audit Log displays a history of all configuration changes applied to the switch from any source, such as Element Manager, SNMP management stations, Web server interface, host, or another switch. To open the Audit Log, click Logs > Audit Log. Figure 52: Audit Log The following describes each column in the Audit Log: ■ Date/Time—Displays the date and time of a change on the switch.
Using Logs — Application Interface—Change was made by an Element Manager user. — SNMP—Change was made by a remote SNMP management station. — Fabric—Change was initiated by another switch in the fabric that is not managed by this HAFM appliance. — Embedded Web server—Change was made by a user through the EWS interface. — Fibre Channel Host—Change was made inband by a Fibre Channel host through the Open Systems Management Server.
Using Logs Event Log The Event Log provides a record of significant events that have occurred on the switch, such as hardware failures, degraded operation, and port problems. To open the Event Log, click Logs > Event Log. Figure 53: Event Log All detected firmware faults and hardware failures are sent to the HAFM appliance for recording in the Event Log. The log provides a maximum of 1000 log entries before it wraps and overwrites the oldest entries.
Using Logs ■ Event—Events are identified by a unique code. Figure 5 lists the event codes and their corresponding event types. Table 5: Event codes Event Codes Corresponding Event Type 000 - 199 System events 200 - 299 Power supply events 300 - 399 Fan module events 400 - 499 CTP events 500 - 599 Port events 800-899 Thermal events ■ Description—A short description of the event.
Using Logs Hardware Log The Hardware Log displays information about field replaceable units (FRUs) inserted and removed from the switch. To open the Hardware Log, click Logs > Hardware Log. Figure 54: Hardware Log Each log entry includes the following: ■ Date/Time—Date and time of the insertion or removal of the FRU. ■ FRU—The name of the inserted or removed FRU: — PWR—Power supply/fan module — SFP—SFP transceiver. — CTP— CTP card. Note: The CTP is not an FRU.
Using Logs Link Incident Log The Link Incident Log displays most recent 1000 link incidents, the date each incident occurred, the time it occurred, and the port where it took place. To open the Link Incident Log, click Logs > Incident Log. Figure 55: Link Incident Log Each log entry contains: ■ Date/Time—The date and time of the incident. ■ Port—The number of the port on which the incident occurred. ■ Link Incident—A short description of the incident.
Using Logs — Not-operational (NOS) primitive sequence received. — A NOS was recognized. — Primitive sequence timeout. — Link reset protocol timeout occurred. — Timeout occurred for an appropriate response while in NOS receive state, and after NOS is no longer recognized. — Invalid primitive sequence received for the current link state. — Either a link reset or a link reset response primitive sequence was recognized while waiting for the offline sequence.
Using Logs Threshold Alert Log This log provides details of threshold alert notifications. Besides the date and time that the alert occurred, the log also displays details about the alert, as configured through the Threshold Alerts option under the Configure menu. To open the Audit Log, click Logs > Threshold Alert Log. Figure 56: Threshold Alert Log ■ Date/Time—Date and time stamp for when the alert occurred. ■ Name—Name for the alert, as configured through the Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box.
Using Logs ■ Utilization—Percent usage of traffic capacity. This is the percent of the port’s throughput capacity achieved by the measured throughput. This setting constitutes the threshold value and is configured through the Configure Threshold Alerts dialog box. For example, a value of 25 means that threshold occurs when throughput reaches 25% of the port’s capacity. ■ Interval—The time interval during which the throughput is measured and an alert can generate.
Using Maintenance Features 5 This chapter describes how to use the options that display from the Maintenance menu on the Element Manager menu bar.
Using Maintenance Features Run Port Diagnostics The Port(s) Diagnostics option enables you to run internal and external loopback tests on any port. To use this option, follow the detailed steps in the appropriate service manual for your Edge Switch. Swap Ports (FICON Management Style) Note: This procedure applies only to the Edge Switch 2/32. FICON Management Style is not available on the Edge Switch 2/24. Click Swap Ports to display the Swap Ports dialog box.
Using Maintenance Features 3. If you want to unblock the port, click Unblock after swap. Note that ports are automatically blocked during the swap process. 4. Enter the second address (in hexadecimal format). 5. If you want to unblock the port, click Unblock after swap. 6. Click Next to continue. 7. Follow the on-screen instructions and click Next to continue through to the next screen. 8. If you are finished configuring the switch, back up the configuration data.
Using Maintenance Features Execute an IPL Caution: The Ethernet connection between the HAFM appliance and switch is interrupted momentarily during an initial program load (IPL). However, this does not interrupt Fibre Channel traffic. Caution: An IPL is not intended for ordinary or casual use and should only be performed if the control processor (CTP) is suspected to be faulty. Do not use this option unless directed by your support representative or if you need to set the CTP.
Using Maintenance Features An IPL initiates the following functions in the switch: ■ Restarts the operational firmware on the CTP card and executes abbreviated power on system tests (POSTs). Then, if no POST errors are encountered, the switch resumes the active role that it had before the IPL. ■ Resets the Ethernet interface on the CTP card, causing the connection to the HAFM appliance to drop momentarily.
Using Maintenance Features Set Online State Use the procedure in this section to display the current switch operating state (offline or online) and change the state as required. See Table 2 on page 48 for more information on the switch operating states. Caution: Before setting the switch offline, warn administrators and users currently operating devices that are attached to the switch that it is going offline and that there will be a disruption of communications.
Using Maintenance Features Manage Firmware Versions Firmware refers to the internal operating code for the switch. You can maintain up to eight firmware versions on the HAFM appliance for downloading to an switch. To use the Firmware Library option to manage firmware versions, follow the steps in the appropriate service manual for your Edge Switch. Enable E-Mail Notification E-mail addresses and the SMTP server address for e-mail notification of switch events must be configured through HAFM.
Using Maintenance Features Backup and Restore Configuration Click Maintenance > Backup & Restore Configuration to save the product configuration stored on the switch to the HAFM appliance hard disk or to restore the product configuration from the HAFM appliance. Only a single copy of the configuration is kept on the HAFM appliance. Backup is primarily for single-CTP systems, such as the Edge Switch 2/24, where a backup is needed to restore to a replacement CTP card.
Using Maintenance Features ■ SNMP configuration (trap recipients, community names, and write authorizations). ■ Zoning configuration (active zone set and default zone state). 2. To back up data, click Backup. 3. When the dialog box displays confirming that the backup is complete, click OK. If the backup fails, a dialog box displays to inform you that the backup to the HAFM appliance failed. Restore Procedure Use the following procedure to restore your product configuration: 1.
Using Maintenance Features Reset Configuration Note: You must have maintenance authorization feature permissions to access this feature. This option resets all configuration data input through options in the Configuration menu, zoning configurations, and switch addressing to factory-default values. Since the current IP address for the switch may not match the factory default address, the Ethernet link between the switch and the HAFM appliance may drop and not reset.
Using Maintenance Features Note: If you have enabled the Full Volatility feature through the switch's maintenance port since the switch was shipped from the factory, this feature will be disabled (factory default) when the configuration is reset. Note: Factory default values may vary, depending on the firmware release installed in your switch. For a list of values, refer to the appropriate service manual for your Edge Switch. 3. Click Reset to reset all configuration data.
Using Maintenance Features 172 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide
Optional Features 6 This chapter provides detailed information on using, administering, and configuring optional HAFM application features through the Element Manager. There are two types of features covered in this chapter: ■ Keyed features, requiring feature keys to be purchased and enabled through the Configure Feature Key dialog box in the product’s Element Manager.
Optional Features FICON Management Server Note: The FICON Management Server feature is available only for the Edge Switch 2/32. The FICON Management Server feature is not available on the Edge Switch 2/24. The FICON Management Server is a keyed feature that allows host control and inband management of the switch through an IBM System/390 or zSeries 900 Parallel Enterprise Server server attached to a switch port. The server communicates with the switch through a FICON channel.
Optional Features 8. Activate changes and close the dialog box by clicking the Activate button. 9. If you are finished configuring the switch, back up the configuration data. For more information, see “Backing Up and Restoring Configuration Data” on page 147.
Optional Features The drop-down list displays the code pages that are available for configuration. The default code page is United States/Canada 00037.
Optional Features Open Systems Management Server Note: Open Systems Management Server (OSMS) is available only for the Edge Switch 2/32. OSMS is not available on the Edge Switch 2/24. The Open System Management Server (OSMS) is a keyed feature that allows host control and inband management of the director or switch through a management application that resides on an open-systems interconnection (OSI) device. This device is attached to a director or switch port.
Optional Features SANtegrity Features SANtegrity includes a set of features that enhance security in SANs (Storage Area Networks) that contain a large and mixed group of fabrics and attached devices. Through these features, you can allow or prohibit switch attachment to fabrics and device attachment to switches. These features are enabled by purchasing a feature key, then enabling the key through the Configure Feature Key dialog box.
Optional Features Enable/Disable and Online State Functions In order for Fabric Binding to function, specific operating parameters and optional features must be enabled. Also, there are specific requirements for disabling these parameters and features when the switch is offline or online.
Optional Features Configuring Switch Binding - Overview To configure Switch Binding, you must first activate the feature using the Switch Binding State Change dialog box while choosing the type of port where you want to restrict connection (connection policy). Possible choices are E_Ports, F_Ports, or all types.
Optional Features Enable/Disable Switch Binding Use the following procedure to enable or disable Switch Binding: 1. Click Configure > Switch Binding > Change State. The Switch Binding State Change dialog box displays. Figure 61: Switch Binding State Change dialog box 2. Perform one of the following steps: — To disable Switch Binding, click Enable Switch Binding to clear the Enable Switch Binding check box, then click Activate. — To enable Switch Binding, click Enable Switch Binding to add a check mark.
Optional Features 5. Edit the Switch Membership List through the Switch Binding Membership List dialog box to add or remove switches and devices that are allowed to connect with the switch. See “Editing the Switch Membership List” on page 182 for procedures. Editing the Switch Membership List Use the following procedure to edit the switch membership list: 1. Click Configure > Switch Binding > Edit Membership List. The Switch Binding Membership List dialog box displays.
Optional Features 2. If nicknames are configured for WWNs through HAFM and you want these to display instead of WWNs in this dialog box, click the Display Options button at the bottom of the dialog box. When the Display Options dialog box displays, click Nickname, then OK. 3. To prohibit connection to a switch port from a WWN currently in the Membership List, click the WWN or nickname in the Membership List, then click the Remove button. The WWN or nickname will move to the Attached Nodes panel.
Optional Features Enable/Disable and Online State Functions For Switch Binding to function, specific operating parameters and optional features must be enabled. Also, there are specific requirements for disabling these parameters and features when the director or switch is offline or online. Be aware of the following: ■ Switch Binding can be enabled or disabled whether the switch is offline or online. ■ Enabling Enterprise Fabric Mode automatically enables Switch Binding.
Optional Features Enterprise Fabric Mode Enterprise Fabric Mode is an option available on the Fabrics menu of HAFM if the SANtegrity Binding feature key is installed. This option automatically enables the following features and operating parameters that are necessary in multiswitch Enterprise Fabric environments. Note that there are specific requirements for disabling these parameters and features when the director or switch is offline or online.
Optional Features If Rerouting Delay is enabled, traffic ceases in the fabric for the time specified in the E_D_TOV field of the Configure Fabric Parameters dialog box (Configure menu). This delay enables frames sent on the old path to exit to their destination before new frames begin traversing the new path. If Enterprise Fabric Mode is enabled, this option is automatically enabled and cannot be disabled unless the switch is offline.
Optional Features For More Information See “Enable/Disable and Online State Functions” on page 179 for Fabric Binding and “Enable/Disable Switch Binding” on page 181 for Switch Binding. To enable and disable this option, refer to the Enterprise Fabric Mode section of the HP StorageWorks HA-Fabric Manager User Guide. Open Trunking Interswitch links (ISLs) connect ports between E_Ports on Fibre Channel switches and link these switches into a multiswitch fabric.
Optional Features Enabling and Configuring Open Trunking To enable OpenTrunking for a specific switch and configure threshold values and event notification options, use the following steps. 1. Click Configure > Open Trunking. The Configure Open Trunking dialog box displays. Figure 63: Configure Open Trunking dialog box 2. Click Enable Open Trunking to display a check mark and enable Open Trunking. 3.
Optional Features Set the Congestion Threshold using one of these methods: — Click the check box under the Use Algorithmic Threshold column to display a value under the Threshold % column. This value is computed by the feature’s rerouting algorithm. If you click this check box, you cannot enter a value into the Threshold % column for the port. Note: If you clear the check box, any value that was set in the Threshold % column for the port redisplays.
Optional Features 5. Set the Low BB Credit Threshold. Note: Using default settings for this threshold should work well in most cases. This step is not required. This is the percentage of time that the transmitting link cannot transmit because BB_Credit is unavailable. It is the percent of time that the link can be treated as back-pressured by the rerouting algorithm. This value is also used when determining routes for a transmit link.
Optional Features Open Trunking Log This log (Figure 64) provides details on flow rerouting that is occurring through switch ports. Figure 64: Open Trunking Log This log contains the following columns: ■ Date/Time—Date and time that action occurred. ■ Receive Port—Decimal receive port number on the local switch associated with the flow that was rerouted. ■ Target Domain—Decimal domain ID associated with the flow that was rerouted.
Optional Features Flexport Edge Switches can be purchased at a discount with all Fibre Channel ports disabled. The optional Flexport feature is a hardware port expansion kit that lets you upgrade switch capacity on demand in eight-port increments. Flexport kits are available to upgrade the: ■ Edge Switch 2/32 from 16 to 24 ports, or from 24 to 32 ports. ■ Edge Switch 2/24 from 8 to 16 ports, or from 16 to 24 ports.
Information and Error Messages A This appendix lists information and error messages that display in pop-up message boxes from the HP StorageWorks HA-Fabric Manager (HAFM) application and the associated Element Managers. The first section of the appendix lists HAFM application messages. The second section lists Element Manager messages. The text of each message is followed by a description and recommended course of action.
Information and Error Messages HAFM Application Messages This section lists HAFM application information and error messages in alphabetical order. Table 7: HAFM Messages Message 194 Description Action A zone must have at least one zone member. When creating a new zone, one or more zone members must be added. Add one or more zone members to the new zone using the Modify Zone dialog box. A zone set must have at least one zone. When creating a new zone set, one or more zones must be added.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Are you sure you want to delete this zone? The selected zone will be deleted from the zone library. Click Yes to delete the zone or No to cancel the operation. Are you sure you want to delete this zone set? The selected zone set will be deleted from the zone library. Click Yes to delete the zone set or No to cancel the operation.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 196 Description Action Cannot display route. All switches in route must be managed by the same server. You cannot show the route between devices that are attached to switches or directors managed by a different HAFM appliance. Make sure devices named in Show Routes dialog box are attached to products managed by this HAFM appliance. Cannot display route. All switches in route must support routing.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Cannot modify a zone with an invalid name. Rename zone and try again. A zone must have a valid name to be modified. Assign a valid name to the zone, then modify the name through the Modify Zone Set dialog box. Cannot modify product. The selected product cannot be modified. Verify the HAFM appliance-to-product link is up. If the link is up: ■ The HAFM appliance may be busy.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 198 Description Action Cannot show zoning library. No fabric exists. You cannot show the zoning library if no fabric exists. You must have identified a switch or director to the HAFM application for a fabric to exist. Identify an existing switch or director to the HAFM application using the New Product dialog box. Click OK to remove all contents from log. This action deletes all contents from the selected log.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Download complete. Click OK and start the HAFM. Download of HAFM and the Element Manager is complete. Start the HAFM application to continue. Duplicate community names require identical write authorizations. If configuring two communities with identical names, they must also have identical write authorizations. Verify that both communities with the same name have the same write authorizations.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 200 Description Action Error connecting to switch. While viewing routes, the HAFM appliance was unable to connect to the switch. The switch failed or the switch-to-HAFM appliance Ethernet link failed. Try the operation again. If the problem persists, contact the next level of support. Error creating zone. The HAFM application encountered an internal error. Try the operation again.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Fabric member could not be found. A fabric member does not exist when the application prepared to find a route, find a route node, or gather route information on that fabric member. Ensure the product is incorporated into the fabric and retry the operation. If the problem persists, contact the next level of support. Fabric not persisted.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 202 Description Action Invalid name. One of the following invalid names was used: CON, AUX, COM1, COM2, COM3, COM4, COM5, COM6, COM7, COM8, COM9, LPT1, LPT2, LPT3, LPT4, LPT5, LPT6, LPT7, LPT8, LPT9, NUL, or PRN. Choose a valid name and retry the operation. Invalid network address. The IP address specified for the product is unknown to the domain name server (invalid). Verify and enter a valid product IP address.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Invalid request. Three conditions result in this message: ■ You tried to add or modify a product from Product View and the network address is already in use. (Network addresses must be unique.) ■ You tried to create a new user with a username that already exists. (A username must be unique.) ■ You tried to delete the default Administrator user. (The default Administrator user cannot be deleted.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 204 Description Action Invalid World Wide Name or nickname. The World Wide Name or nickname that you have specified is invalid. The valid format for the World Wide Name is eight two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated by colons (xx:xx:xx:xx:xx: xx:xx:xx). The valid format for a nickname is non blank characters, up to 32 characters. Try the operation again using a valid World Wide Name or nickname. Invalid World Wide Name.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action No management server specified. An HAFM appliance is not defined to the HAFM application. At the HAFM 8 Log In dialog box, type an appliance name in the Server Name field and click Login. No nickname selected. No nickname was selected when the command was attempted. Choose a nickname and try again. No Element Managers installed. No director or switch Element Manager is installed on this workstation.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 206 Description Action No zone set selected or zone set no longer exists. A zoning operation was attempted without a zone set selected, or the zone set you selected no longer exists in the fabric. Choose a zone set and try the operation again. Only attached nodes can be displayed in this mode. You cannot display unused ports when adding ports by World Wide Name. Change the add criteria to Add by Port.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Routing is not supported by the switch. This switch or director does not support the Show Routes feature. Choose a different switch or director to show the route. SANtegrity Feature not installed. Please contact your sales representative. You selected Fabric Binding or Enterprise Fabric Mode from the Fabrics menu.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) 208 Message Description Action The Domain ID was not accepted. The World Wide Name and Domain ID must be unique in the Fabric Membership List. You attempted to add a detached switch to the Fabric Membership List through the Fabric Binding option (SANtegrity Binding feature), but a switch already exists in the fabric with the same domain ID. Enter a unique domain ID for the switch in the Add Detached Switch dialog box.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action The maximum number of open products has already been reached. The maximum number of open switches allowed was reached. Close an Element Manager session (existing open product) before opening a new session. The maximum number of products has already been configured. The number of managed HP switches (48) that can be defined to the HAFM application was reached.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 210 Description Action The nickname is already assigned. Either use a different name or do not save the name as a nickname. The entered nickname already exists in the fabric. Each nickname must be unique. Define a different nickname. The software version on this management server is not compatible with the version on the remote management server.
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message Description Action This World Wide Name was not accepted. The World Wide Name and Domain ID must be unique in the Fabric Membership List. You attempted to add a detached switch to the Fabric Membership List through the Fabric Binding option (SANtegrity Binding feature), but an entry already exists in the Fabric Membership List with the same World Wide Name (WWN).
Information and Error Messages Table 7: HAFM Messages (Continued) Message 212 Description Action You must define at least one remote network address. At least one IP address for a remote workstation must be configured for a remote session to be activated. Define an IP address for at least one remote workstation at the Remote Access dialog box. You must download the HAFM client via the web install.
Information and Error Messages Element Manager Messages This section lists Element Manager information and error messages in alphabetical order. Table 8: Element Manager Messages Message Description Action A Preferred Path already exists between this Source Port and this Destination Domain ID. Please re-configure the desired path. For any source port, only one path may be defined to each destination domain ID. On the Add/Change Preferred Path dialog box, change the preferred path.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message 214 Description Action Another Element Manager is currently performing a firmware install. Only one instance of the Element Manager can install a firmware version to the director at a time. Wait for the firmware installation process to complete and try the operation again. Are you sure you want to delete firmware version? This message requests confirmation to delete a firmware version.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Cannot disable Insistent Domain ID while Fabric Binding is active. You attempted to disable the Insistent Domain ID parameter through the Configure Switch Parameters dialog box, but Fabric Binding is enabled. Disable Fabric Binding through the Fabric Binding dialog box before disabling these parameters. Cannot enable beaconing on a failed FRU.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 216 Message Description Action Cannot have E-Ports if Management Style is FICON unless SANtegrity feature is installed. Please contact your sales representative. Firmware is below the required level and you attempted to change management style from Open Systems to FICON management style with E_Ports configured, but SANtegrity Binding is not installed. Informational message.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Cannot retrieve current SNMP configuration. The director SNMP configuration cannot be retrieved by the Element Manager because the Ethernet link is down or busy. Retry the operation later. If the condition persists, contact the next level of support. Cannot retrieve diagnostics results.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 218 Message Description Action Cannot run diagnostics on a port that is failed. Port diagnostics (loopback tests) cannot be performed on a port that has failed any previous diagnostic (power-on diagnostic, online diagnostic, or loopback test). The amber LED associated with the port illuminates to indicate the failed state. Reset the port and perform diagnostics again. Cannot run diagnostics on an active E-port.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Cannot save port configuration. The port configuration cannot be saved at the Element Manager because the Ethernet link is down or busy. Retry the operation later. If the condition persists, contact the next level of support. Cannot save SNMP configuration. The SNMP configuration cannot be saved at the Element Manager because the Ethernet link is down or busy. Retry the operation later.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message 220 Description Action Cannot set switch date and time. The switch date and time cannot be set at the Element Manager because the Ethernet link is down or busy. Retry the operation later. If the condition persists, contact the next level of support. Cannot set switch state. The director or switch state cannot be set at the Element Manager because the Ethernet link is down or busy. Retry the operation later.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Connection to management server lost. Click OK to exit application. The HAFM application at a remote workstation lost the network connection to the HAFM appliance. Start the HAFM application to connect to the HAFM appliance. Continuing may overwrite host programming. Continue? Configurations sent from the host may be overwritten by HAFM.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 222 Message Description Action Control Unit Port (CUP) name and port name are identical (FICON ONLY). Within the address configuration, one or more of the port names are the same as the CUP name. Make sure all names are unique for the ports and CUP name. Date entered is invalid. The date is entered incorrectly at the Configure Date and Time dialog box.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Director must be offline to configure. Clock alert mode is enabled through the Configure FICON Management Server dialog box and you attempted to enable Periodic Date/Time Synchronization through the Configure Date and Time dialog box. Disable clock alert mode through the Configure FICON Management Server dialog box. Disabling Insistent Domain ID will disable Fabric Binding.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message 224 Description Action Duplicate Community names require identical write authorizations. Duplicate community names are entered at the Configure SNMP dialog box, and have different write authorizations. Delete the duplicate community name or make the write authorizations consistent. Element Manager error . The Element Manager encountered an internal error and cannot continue.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Error transferring files < message >. An error occurred while transferring files from the PC hard drive to the Element Manager. The message varies, depending on the problem. Try the file transfer operation again. If the problem persists, contact the next level of support. Feature not supported. The ‘product name’ must be running version 05.00.00 or higher.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message 226 Description Action Firmware file not found. The firmware version is not installed (or was deleted) from the firmware library at the HAFM appliance. Add the firmware version to the library and retry the operation. Incompatible configuration between management style and management server.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Invalid configuration name. Attempted to save an address configuration name with an invalid name. Use up to 24 alphanumeric characters, including spaces, hyphens, and underscores. Invalid feature key. The feature key was not recognized. Re-enter the feature key. Ensure that you type each character in the correct case (upper or lower), include the dashes, and do not add any spaces at the end.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message 228 Description Action Invalid response received from director. An error occurred at the director during a firmware download operation. Retry the firmware download operation. If the problem persists, contact the next level of support. Invalid serial number for this feature key. The serial number and the feature key did not match.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Invalid value for E_D_TOV. At the Configure Fabric Parameters dialog box, the error detect time-out value (E_D_TOV) must be an integer from 2 through 600 inclusive. Verify and enter a valid number. Invalid value for hour (0-23). At the Configure Date and Time dialog box, the HH value (hour) must be an integer from 0 through 23 inclusive. Verify and enter a valid time.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message 230 Description Action Invalid value for threshold (1-99)%. Value entered for each port in the Configure Open Trunking dialog box must be in the range from 1 to 99. This message only displays if the optional Open Trunking feature is installed. Enter a number from 1 to 99 into the Threshold % column of the Configure Open Trunking dialog box. Invalid value for year.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Maximum number of versions already installed. The number of firmware versions that can be defined to the HAFM application’s firmware library (eight) was reached. Delete an existing firmware version before adding a new version. No file was selected. Action requires the selection of a file. Select a file. No firmware version file was selected.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 232 Message Description Action Open Trunking is not installed for this product. Please contact your sales representative. The Open Trunking feature key has not been enabled. This message only displays if the optional Open Trunking feature is installed. Enter the feature key into the Configure Feature Key dialog box and enable the key. If you require a feature key, see your account representative.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action Port cannot swap to itself. Port addresses entered in the Swap Ports dialog box are the same. Ensure that address in the first and second Port Address fields are different. Port diagnostics cannot be performed on an inactive port. This displays when port diagnostics is run on a port in an inactive state. Run the diagnostics on an active port.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 234 Message Description Action SANtegrity Feature not installed. Please contact your sales representative. You selected Switch Binding from the Configure menu, but the optional SANtegrity Binding feature is not installed. Install the SANtegrity Binding key through the Configure Feature Key dialog box before using Switch Binding features. Send firmware failed. A firmware download operation failed.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action The add firmware process has been aborted. You aborted the process to add a firmware version to the HAFM appliance’s firmware library. Verify the firmware addition is to be aborted, then click OK to continue. Switch clock alert mode must be cleared before enabling period synchronization.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 236 Message Description Action The following parameters cannot be disabled while Enterprise Fabric Mode is active: Insistent Domain ID, Rerouting Delay, Domain RSCNs. You attempted to disable these parameters in the Configure Switch Parameters dialog box while Enterprise Fabric Mode is enabled. Disable Enterprise Fabric Mode through the Enterprise Fabric Mode dialog box in HAFM, then disable the parameters.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) Message Description Action The switch did not respond in the time allowed. While waiting to perform a requested action, the director or switch timed out. Retry the operation. If the condition persists, contact the next level of support. The switch is busy saving maintenance information. The director or switch cannot perform the requested action because it is busy saving maintenance information. Retry the operation later.
Information and Error Messages Table 8: Element Manager Messages (Continued) 238 Message Description Action This feature key does not include all of the features currently installed. Do you want to continue with feature key activation? The feature set currently installed for this system contains features that are not being installed with the new feature key. Click Yes to activate the feature key and remove current features not in the new feature set or No to cancel.
Index A alerts link incident (LIN) 96 link incident (LIN), enabling 116 threshold 33 threshold, clearing 75 audience 12 audit log 34, 152 authorization traps, enabling 129 authorized reseller, HP 17 C call home notification, enabling 37, 167 class 2 statistics 86 class 3 statistics 86 clear system error light, product menu 29 close product menu 29 the Element Manager 49 code pages 175, 176 table 176 Edge Switch Element Manager User Guide Index backup and restore configuration configuration data 147 Elem
Index operating parameters dialog box 105 ports dialog box 31, 115 Preferred Path dialog box 109, 111 preferred paths 108 SNMP dialog box 32, 129 procedure 129 threshold alerts 137 configure FICON management server parameters dialog box 174 configure menu 30 backup and restore configuration data 147 configure threshold alert(s) 137 date/time 32 enable telnet 34, 146, 147 enable web server 33 export configuration report 33, 145 features 32 identification 30 OpenTrunking 33 ports 31 preferred path 31 SNMP ag
Index displaying port statistics 86 document conventions 13 prerequisites 12 related documentation 12 domain ID insistent 103 preferred 102 domain RSCNs 104 enterprise fabric mode 186 E E_D_TOV 106 EBCDIC code pages 175 Element Manager 28 backing up 53 close 49 configure 30 description 22 FRU list view 91 hardware view 56 help menu 38 licensing 23 logs menu 34 maintenance menu 35 menu bar 28 node list view 79 node list view menu 43 opening 26 performance view 84 performance view menu 45 port list view 76
Index FICON management server code page 175 configuration procedure 174 configuring 130, 174 host control 175 programmed offline state control 175 switch clock alert mode 175 FICON management server feature 174 FICON management style ports swapping 162 firmware library dialog box 36 firmware versions 36, 167 Flexport feature 192 frames too long, error statistics 88 FRU description 29 product menu 29 properties 62 FRU list view defined 91 displayed 47, 91 opening 91 G getting help 17 H HAFM application me
Index L languages, code page 175 licensing information 23 link incident (LIN) alerts 96 clearing 73 enabling 116 link incident log 35 load balancing ISLs 187 login password 21 username 21 logs audit 34, 152 event 34, 154 expanding columns 151 functions and options 150 hardware 34, 35, 156 link incident 35 menu 34 audit 34 event 34 hardware 34, 35 link incident 35 threshold alert 159 using 150 window button function 150 M maintenance menu 35 backup and restore configuration 37, 168 collect maintenance data
Index Open Trunking dialog box 190 log 191 Open Trunking feature dialog box 188 opening Element Manager 26 OpenTrunking feature 33, 187 enabling and configuring 188 operating parameters 30 domain RSCNs 104 E_D_TOV 106 interop mode 108 R_A_TOV 106 rerouting delay 103 suppress zoning RSCNs 104 switch priority 107 operating states for ports 93 operational states 57 operational statistics 88 P password, default 21 performance view 84 menu 45, 84 using 84 pop-up menu 190 port binding 74, 117 blocking 115 confi
Index R R_A_TOV 106 rack stability, warning 16 reason field messages 65 related documentation 12 remote user workstations 22 rerouting delay 103 enterprise fabric mode 185 reset configuration data 170 overview 37 procedure 170 restore configuration data 37 Element Manager 53 maintenance menu 147 procedures 168 S SANtegrity features 178 to 184 fabric binding 178 switch binding 179 save data collection dialog box 35 save dialog box 151 segmented E_Port messages 66 set director date and time manually 135 set
Index threshold alerts clearing 75 time, changing 135 traffic statistics 89 trunking feature 187 dialog box 188 enabling and configuring 188 trunking log 191 U UDP number 130 United States/Canada 00037 code page 176 user datagram protocol 130 username, default 21 V versions, firmware 36 view menu FRU list view 91 node list view 79 246 performance view 84 port list view 76 view panel 39 view tabs 38 W warning rack stability 16 symbols on equipment 14 warnings resetting configurations 37, 38 web server,