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HP AD583C User's Manual

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1. Byte N 1 Target LUN e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 113 The interface card supports the Peripheral Device Addressing Method and the Logical Unit Addressing Method depending on the configuration Table 21 Arbitrated loop Node number to AL_PA lookup table 0 0x01 21 0x2E 42 0x52 63 0x74 84 0xA6 105 0xC9 1 0x02 22 0x31 43 0x53 64 0x75 85 0xA7 106 0xCA 2 0x04 23 0x32 44 0x54 65 0x76 86 0xA9 107 0xCB 3 0x08 24 0x33 45 0x55 66 0x79 87 0xAA 108 0xCC 4 0x0F 25 0x34 46 0x56 67 0x7A 88 0xAB 109 0xCD 5 0x10 26 0x35 47 0x59 68 0x7C 89 0xAC 110 0xCE 6 0x17 27 0x36 48 0x5A 69 0x80 90 0xAD 111 0xD1 7 0x18 28 0x39 49 0x5C 70 0x81 91 0xAE 112 0xD2 8 0x1B 29 0x3A 50 0x63 71 0x82 92 0xB1 113 0xD3 9 0x1D 30 0x3C 51 0x65 72 0x84 93 0xB2 114 0xD4 10 0x1E 31 0x43 52 0x66 73 0x88 94 0xB3 115 0xD5 11 0x1F 32 0x45 53 0x67 74 0x8F 95 0xB4 116 0xD6 12 0x23 33 0x46 54 0x69 75 0x90 96 0xB5 117 0xD9 13 0x25 34 0x47 55 0x6A 76 0x97 97 0xB6 118 0xDA 14 0x26 35 0x49 56 0x6B 77 0x98 98 0xB9 119 0xDC 15 0x27 36 0x4A 57 0x6C 78 0x9B 99 0xBA 120 0xEO 16 0x29 37 0x4B 58 0x6D 79 0x9D 100 0xBC 121 0xE1 17 0x2A 38 0x4C 59 0x6E 80 0x9E 101 0xC3 122 0xE2 18 0x2B 39 0x4D 60 0x7 1 81 0x9F 102 0xC5 123 0xE4 19 0x2C 40 0x4E 61 0x72 82 0xA3 103 0xC6 124 0xE8 20 0x2D 41 0x51 62 0x73 83 0xA5 104 0xC7 125 0xEF The data shown in Table 21 com
2. Select 1 to edit the trace settings configuration Select 2 to edit the event settings configuration Select 3 to edit the special event logging configuration Trace configuration This option allows trace levels to be set These settings should not be modified in normal operation as performance degradation may result There are two pages of trace levels Figure 57 Trace settings Trace Settings X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 0 General Errors ON 1 FCP Driver OFF 2 FCP Transport OFF 3 FCP Management OFF 4 PS Transport OFF 5 PS Management OFF 6 PS Driver OFF U Update Current Operating Trace Levels X Return to previous menu Enter the trace level index lt enter gt for next page gt e1 200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 75 If the Enter key is selected the next page of trace levels appears as follows Figure 58 Trace settings Trace Settings X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 0 SG List OFF 1 Timing OFF 2 FCP RMI OFF 3 AF OFF 4 INBAND OFF 5 Multi Host Lib OFF 6 Queue Element OFF U Update Current Operating Trace Levels X Return to previous menu Enter the trace level index lt enter gt for next page gt Enter a level number from the Trace Settings that are shown This toggles the current setting to either ON or O
3. EY NOTE If there is no response using the Enter key press the space bar slowly 7 or 8 times and then press the Enter key slowly 7 or 8 times The baud rate used by the terminal or terminal emulator must be 9600 19200 38400 57600 or 115200 for the Autobaud feature to recognize it The interface card does not function properly at any other baud rate e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 21 Setting up serial port communications Before supplying power to the interface card HP recommends setting up serial port communications with your host computer unless serial I O was previously established and is currently running 22 The interface card is designed to communicate with a terminal or any operating system utilizing a terminal emulator For example most Windows operating systems can use a terminal Be sure the baud rate data bits stop bits parity and flow control are set correctly To set up serial communications with the interface card 1 Plug the serial cable into one of the host computer s serial ports COM1 or COM2 and then plug the other end of the serial cable into the interface card s serial port 2 Start the terminal emulator 3 Set the terminal emulator to use the appropriate COM port 4 Specify the following settings for the port Baud Rate 9600 19200 38400 57600 or 115200 Autobaud only recognizes these baud rates Data Bits 8 Stop Bits
4. Page 1 out of 1 pages gt Number of entries in the Device Table 3 Enter N Next P Prev X Exit gt Select 9 from the Device Mapping menu to activate port mapping changes A CAUTION Before activating any port mapping changes HP strongly recommends that the user verifies there are not any command or data operations occurring in conjunction with devices affected by the mapping changes For example deleting a LUN or device from a map may disrupt I O transfers with that device lt is the user s responsibility to ensure that no operations are negatively impacted due to the activation of mapping changes Ef NOTE All current mapping settings take effect immediately If another management interface has made unsaved mapping changes those changes are lost Current mapping settings are also not visible in other interfaces until the interface card is rebooted Ef NOTE Ifthe Activate Port Mapping Changes option is not selected the mapping changes do not take effect until the interface card is rebooted 74 Using the Command Line Interface Trace and event settings configuration This option allows set up of trace and events settings Figure 56 Utility settings Utility Settings X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Trace Settings Configuration 2 Event Settings Configuration 3 Special Event Logging Configuration X Return to previous menu
5. Parity None Flow Control None or XON XOFF NOTE Before initially applying power to the library make sure all the FC devices are powered on first and that they have finished performing individual self tests This helps to ensure that device discovery works correctly 5 Apply power to the tape library The power up process can take up to 90 seconds Once complete the main menu should be accessible Installation cabling and setup 3 Device management To provide connectivity between hosts and devices it is necessary for the interface card to be recognized with an address on the connected Fibre Channel network SCSI bus configuration The interface card provides the capability to reset SCSI buses during the interface card boot cycle This allows the devices on a SCSI bus to be set to a known state Configuration provides for the SCSI bus reset feature to be enabled or disabled The interface card negotiates for the maximum values for transfer rates and bandwidth on a SCSI bus If an attached SCSI device does not allow the full rates the interface card uses the best rate it can negotiate for that device Negotiation is on a device specific basis so the unit can support a mix of SCSI device types on the same SCSI bus FC port configuration By default the configuration of the FC port on the interface card is set to N_Port mode For more information see the Fibre Channel Configuration sections i
6. To view or change current host information 1 In the Mapping menu screen select the desired map 2 Click Edit View in the Host section of the screen The Fibre Channel Host Name dialog box is displayed Current host information is shown at the top of the dialog box 3 Enter the new map settings and then select Modify Fibre Channel Host Name settings gt Host Name Host ID hexadecimal Port WWN Hi hexadecimal service mode restricted access gt Port WWN Lo hexadecimal service mode restricted access Node WWN Hi hexadecimal service mode restricted access Node WWN Lo hexadecimal service mode restricted access Map Name e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 47 Statistics menu Accessed from the Main menu the Statistics menu is used to display Fibre Channel port and SCSI bus information see Figure 31 Figure 31 Statistics menu o AAA o os o 3 2 oe gt 0 o Y i 83 sf a HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses A FC PORT 0 STATISTICS MAIN MENU In Device Data Sequences 0x0000023E Home Out Device Data Sequences 0x00000123 System In Link Data Sequences 0x0000000B Ports Out Link Data Sequences 0x0000000A Discovery In PBSY Frames 0x00000000 Mapping Out PBSY Frames 0x00000000 Statistics In FBSY Frames 0x00000000 Utilities In PRJT Frames 0x00000000 Report Out PRJT Frame
7. Addressing structures and operations Fibre Channel and SCSI systems employ different methods of addressing devices The inclusion of a interface card requires that a method of translating device IDs be implemented so that each SCSI device is mapped to the appropriate Fibre Channel LUN The SCSI buses establish bus connections between devices Targets on a SCSI bus may internally address logical units The addressing of a specific SCSI device is represented by the BUS TARGET LUN triplet When a Fibre Channel initiator initializes on a loop the host must first determine what devices exist on the loop Device discovery is performed and an FCP target device list is built Each device is queried for FCP logical units The logical units are the actual devices that the operating system will address When an initiator addresses a logical unit the LUN field used is consistent in form with the SCC defined fields All current Fibre Channel host bus adapter drivers are consistent with these methods The addressing used is the SCC Logical Unit Addressing and Peripheral Device Addressing methods shown in Table 17 and Table 18 First level addressing is supported so only the first 2 bytes of the 8 byte FCP LUN are used Table 17 SCC addressing structure Address Method Specific Address Method Specific Description Peripheral Device Addressing Method Volume Set Addressing Method Logical Unit Addressing Method Reserved
8. Within Telnet the user will see only a blank Telnet window which is not accessible Instead of an IP address value displaying in upper left heading of Telnet window None appears instead Within half a minute Telnet will produce a warning message stating Connect Failed Within Visual Manager the user will be able to submit a new Web page and reboot as is typically the case However since the DHCP isn t contacted a new IP address will not be generated after reboot Therefore Visual Manager will no longer be useful since no IP address is available The previous non DHCP will not work either Visual Manager will time out and provide a warning message to the user stating that a connection with server could not be established In the above situations perform the following 1 Check on the status of the DHCP server with your network administrator 2 Ensure the Ethernet good link light on the interface card is green and if not check that the Ethernet cable is securely connected to the interface card 3 Check the configuration of the interface card including the gateway address and assign values manually if needed If the above list all appear to be in order but DHCP is still not working attempt to reset the interface card to factory defaults any current configuration settings will be reset reboot the interface card and then reconfigure the interface card as desired If problems persist see Technical sup
9. UTILITIES MENU FTP Utility Trace Settings Current Traces Previous Traces Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking SCSI command tracking This menu provides options for setting up and logging SCSI commands that are received or transmitted by the interface card Results are displayed in the Host Device ID Table see Figure 38 Figure 38 SCSI command tracking E A F7 3 Y A UN h 3 3 a 3 HP 1200 320 4G Interface Controller CA invent MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot UTILITIES MENU FTP Utility Trace Settings Current Traces Previous Traces Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking 54 Visual manager user interface To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses SCSI Command Tracking Setting Change the state of SCSI Command Tracking of on O Clear ALL the SCSI Command Tracking Entries No Yes O Host Device ID Table Type Hosts Devices Hosts Devices Hosts Devices Protocol Type ses y Hosts SCSI Commands While the interface card s current previous and last assert trace data does provide a complete summary of events in a chronological fashion SCSI Command Tracking adds the ability to filter the trace data to show only the in
10. e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 7 IMPORTANT Provides clarifying information or specific instructions EY NOTE Provides additional information TIP Provides helpful hints and shortcuts HP technical support Telephone numbers for worldwide technical support are listed on the HP support web site http www hp com support Collect the following information before calling e Technical support registration number if applicable Product serial numbers Product model names and numbers e Applicable error messages Operating system type and revision level Detailed specific questions For continuous quality improvement calls may be recorded or monitored HP strongly recommends that customers sign up online using the Subscriber s choice web site http www hp com go e updates Subscribing to this service provides you with e mail updates on the latest product enhancements newest versions of drivers and firmware documentation updates as well as instant access to numerous other product resources e After signing up you can quickly locate your products by selecting Business support and then Storage under Product Category HP authorized reseller For the name of your nearest HP authorized reseller In the United States call 1 800 282 6672 e Elsewhere visit the HP web site hitp www hp com Then click Contact HP to find locations and telephone numb
11. Optical SFP support Shortwave SCSI bus features Auto negotiation for Narrow Wide Fast and up to Ultra320 Concurrent commands tagged command queuing and disconnect reconnect SCSI 2 and SCSI 3 protocols Connection type is VHDCI 68 pin D shell P type connectors VD single ended termination Disk tape optical and changer devices Management features Interface card LUN commands Out of band Ethernet TCP IP management access DHCP for easier network addressing Serial 3 pin connector for terminal access Ethernet RJ 45 connector for FTP Telnet and Web browser access Firmware that can be updated in the field SCC FC only Indexed and Auto Assigned addressing modes e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 11 External indicators Fibre Channel link status and activity LEDs SCSI bus activity LEDs Ethernet link status and activity LEDs Power Fault LED e Beacon LED Operating environment e Oto 50 C 32 to 122 F 5 to 80 relative humidity non condensing Non operating environment i e for unit storage e 40 to 55 C 40 to 131 F e Oto 92 relative humidity non condensing HP e1 200 320 4Gb Interface Card benefits The interface card is designed to connect SCSI devices into a Fibre Channel FC fabric or loop The interface card comes with one 4 Gb s Fibre Channel port and two LVD SE SCSI buses The Fibre Channel ports can be set for 1 2 or 4 Gb s speeds and can connect in arb
12. Special note regarding Ethernet IP subnet mask and gateway addresses Once DHCP is enabled any null readings are acceptable for these 3 options before reboot The Ethernet Configuration Menu will also not allow these 3 options to be changed while DHCP is enabled since they are automatically configured by DHCP Here s an example of the DHCP enabled menu Figure 83 Ethernet configuration menu Ethernet Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 IP Address 192 168 60 203 DHCP Subnet Mask 255 255 255 200 IP Gateway 192 168 60 1 Ethernet Physical Address 00 E0 02 E3 17 51 Ethernet Mode 10 100Mbps Auto Neg Hostname interface card DHCP Configuration Enabled 1 Change IP Address 2 Change IP Subnet Mask 3 Change IP Gateway 4 Change Ethernet Physical Address 5 Toggle Ethernet Mode 6 Change Hostname 7 Toggle DHCP Configuration 8 Change Security Settings X Return to previous menu 120 Enabling DHCP on the HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Visual Manager To access the interface card using the Visual Manager interface 1 2 3 Look up the current IP address within the Ethernet Configuration menu using the serial interface Type the IP address in the Web browser without using www or or any other characters or symbols After entering the IP address the user should see the Configuration Main menu
13. 0h Y i HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Active Fabric Settings MAIN MENU Home ServerFree Backup Mode DISABLED System Ports Discovery Mapping Controller LUNS in auto assigned map go Last v Statistics rr Utilities SUBMIT Report Reboot Number of Controller LUNS 1v NOTE Increasing the number of Controller Luns will take effect immediately SYSTEM MENU For all other changes the router must be rebooted Serial Network Active Fabric User Real Time Clock RESET MENU Factory Settings Reset NOTE Increasing the number of Controller LUNS takes effect immediately For all other changes the interface card must be rebooted Active Fabric settings ServerFree Backup Mode NOT Supported Number of Controller LUNs default 1 sets the number of controller LUNs reported by the interface card The number must be in the range of O through 4 Controller LUNS in auto assigned map go settings are First or Last Setting the choice to Last is recommended Setting the choice to First can cause issues with HP UX However if working with an OVMS host it should be set to First e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 37 User The User screen is used to set up interface card security see Figure 21 Figure 21 User screen security settings HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration
14. sannana aeaaeae 75 Trace configuralo ss aaa at aai at A A ta E E 0 ern de a tp 1 75 Event configuration n on no Rah Aa aT Hd PAG eae AGHA Raw eae Se eae od 76 Special event logging configuration n nannaa teen eens 77 Real Time clock configuration n onana naana 78 Active fabric configuration 220 AR AA dent dw a AA AA Sh rai 9 78 Save A E aa hid Sal hak sg eae 79 Restore last saved configuration ori ri a dci eRe de ei DES 29 Reset to factory detallo is dae e ana a aa ar 79 AA A eee ee ee eee Tee eee eee AR 79 System statistics MENU isses si ae dae a e e a ee a E e a a a a e a e A a E E a 80 A eo rara a a E AI 84 R ntime repo oia o di da e di a abd Oded backed 84 Diagnostics mode 444 Sate dude da RRA Ad oa 85 e A AAA A A te be lech tea Delia we ok tei De ee mk 86 SCSI command rack Gen Se RUE rie ERED DHE OEY ERR BA 86 Display trace and assertion Mist ios rs bbe e eae FG R04 ESSE dd de de EE BES 87 Get a copy of trace buffer ois Gatien oats eats HEE AAS EMO hee R RH eee Bone RRS 87 A A dhe te PRUNES Ee Abu hee eh bak ee eke Ra OEE GR heme whee 88 Download a new revision of the firmware n nananana nananana 88 7 Using the FIP Were ss oe C24 ra piatte EAE EG oe OES REDE G YESS 89 Backip restore configuration se as orcas ake PEA Me RA Rd eM RAY 89 Configuration backup procedure cis saa da ad Kae ad KS SEINE EES CATS REL EEN ERE EEA RRS 89 Configuration restore procedure 4c kawn van ee eine dak A RA A 89 Get a copy o
15. 2 Click Connect to establish a connection with the router 3 Use BROWSE or the Local File box to specify the filename and directory of the file to be read or written 4 Select Binary transfer mode 5 Click Put to Rtr button to load a file onto the router or Get from Rtr button to retrieve a file from the router The following files can be sentto the router e any name cfg valid configuration file e any name dix valid firmware file The following files can be retrieved from the router e any name cfg configuration file e curtrace te system traces for the current boot cycle e prtrace txt system traces from previous boot cycle If a valid firmware file or a config file is sent to the router an automatic reboot will occur once the file has been received The user will not be able to access the web server while the router reboots This is a period of about 30 seconds or more if SCSI discovery delays are enabled Connection User Name Password L Jl Router IP Address Local File Browse Transfer Mode Ascii Binary Transfer Status FTP Status GetfromRtr Put to Rtr The FTP utility requires the use of a JAVA applet and prompts for permission to install the applet if needed If the prompt is displayed follow the on screen instructions to complete the installation The FTP utility then prompts for permission to run the applet NOTE applet plug
16. 4 to toggle the Initiator Target Bit Setting in PRLI_ACC between INITIATOR Bit Set TARGET Bit Set INITIATOR amp TARGET Bits Set and INITIATOR amp TARGET Bits CLEAR This should be configured to one of the options for SET on both interface card routers when using the interface card in an interface card to router configuration a configuration where at least one interface card router appears as a target to at least one other interface card router that appears as an initiator The default setting is TARGET BIT SET Select 5 to toggle FC Confirm Setting in PRLI_ACC between FC CONFIRM SET and FC CONFIRM CLEAR The default setting is FC CONFIRM SET This option should be toggled to FC CONFIRM SET when the server is using QLogic HBAs Select 6 to access the Target Reset Mode menu The default setting is setting ALTERNATE Following are descriptions for each of the settings Select 1 to use a normal SCSI bus reset code to recover from a bus problem Select 2 to uses a progressive SCSI bus recovery mechanism that first attempts to recover the bus by attempting a target reset and if this fails then trying the bus reset Select 7 to toggle Force FLOGI in Private Loop between Disabled and Enabled The default setting is Disabled FLOGI Fabric Login is a process by which a node makes a logical connection to a fabric switch This setting should be used to connect the attached Fibre Channel devices as private loop devices for certain switched fabr
17. 45 Ethernet connection are in reference to the Ethernet receptacle on the back panel of the HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card The HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card Ethernet connection supports the IEEE specifications for OBASE T and 100BASE TX Ethernet standards Figure 79 RJ 45 pin assignments 123456 7 8 Table 11 RJ 45 pin descriptions Number Description 1 Transmit out Transmit out Receive in No connection No connection Receive in No connection 0 NI OCI O BR WwW N No connection e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 101 102 Serial and Ethernet pin assignments B Regulatory compliance and safety Regulatory compliance Federal Communications Commission notice Class A Part 15 of the Federal Communications Commission FCC Rules and Regulations has established Radio Frequency RF emission limits to provide an interference free radio frequency spectrum Many electronic devices including computers generate RF energy incidental to their intended function and are therefore covered by these rules These rules place computers and related peripheral devices into two classes A and B depending upon their intended installation Class A devices are those that may reasonably be expected to be installed in a business or commercial environment Class B devices are those that may reasonably be expected to be installed in a residential environment
18. 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 55 Reboot option CAUTION Confirm there is no activity such as a backup in progress before initiating a reboot because interface card activities will be disrupted Interface card reboots are executed using this Main menu option see Figure 39 When the library is rebooted current interface card activities are disrupted All submitted configuration changes are activated during the boot up process Figure 39 Reboot screen Liz il HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses S system Reboot To reboot the system select yes and click MAIN MENU the submit button Home System No O Yes O Ports SUBMIT Discovery Mapping Please be patient The system will automatically return Statistics to the home page after the reboot is complete Utilities Report Reboot The system automatically returns to the home page after the reboot has completed 56 Visual manager user interface 6 Using the Command Line Interface This chapter describes specific configuration options available from the perspective of the Command Line Interface CLI For an overview of using the other configuration methods available see Interface card management on page 27 The interface card allows the user to access many configuration settings through the Command Line Interface Among these settings ar
19. 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 3 5 Visual manager user interface 1 teens 31 MET Mos o PA A A 31 A O aa aids det AA apg A dong yaa 32 Visual Manager menu structure ia Godda Gaede dae Se booed bea ie eae ba ous OA 32 Home DOGS con sheer eee e shee oe he wee ae Rat es ee Gwe he he aes oe 33 System MEN sere CR eee Nk Ve a Aad ae Bh ale in a ack Be it ee OA Ie dias 34 Serial configuration o Ran cPne aichay ce uay ahaa te LADLe AGAWAM Deh PAO eae a eee 35 Network configuration triciclo de 36 Active fabric configuration cr A AAA AS 37 MSIE hs se OA 38 Real Time Clock comiqueros 39 Reset meng iiet ie neretai eet haia e aa e aa a en dci ica it e 40 PORS MENU gaira dota ad dl a diem ara g ee dae So 41 Fibre Channel port configuration a des ade ae lt td 42 SCSI bus conque dara aaa eed 43 Discovery MENU serie doo dr id eee a had wae nue ha ate dd da 44 MAPping Menu sa kad vad daa rata deal wih dd daw Sak dele le thle 46 Fibre Channel mapping tasks its Gerke Rk wee Oe OHNE Rae ARALAR wae Oe RoE 46 Viewing and changing Fibre Channel map information 0 0 0 cee cee eee 47 Viewing and changing Fibre Channel host information 0 000 ce eee eee eee eee 47 Statistics MEA y doth nk et oae a A ie REED REE ESOS ERT UA RA 48 Utilities MEA te rs e eh bee td wate hades Chee IA A ears es 49 FTP utility access agate pony ag a dea DEG nas ae ata Rages alee hoe ene ay 50 Trace settings configuration 35 6
20. 7 Real Time Clock Configuration 8 Active Fabric Configuration A Save Configuration B Restore Last Saved Configuration C Reset to Factory Defaults X Return to main menu 58 Using the Command Line Interface Baud rate configuration This menu changes the baud rate used on the serial port Select 1 through 5 for the appropriate baud rate setting If you are using the Autobaud feature it may not be necessary to set a baud rate See Autobaud feature on page 21 for more information on using the Autobaud feature The default setting for the baud rate is 115200 Figure 42 Baud rate configuration menu Baud Rate Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 9600 2 19200 3 38400 4 57600 5 115200 X Return to previous menu EY NOTE The asterisk symbol indicates the current setting for the baud rate e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 59 Ethernet configuration This option allows for setting up all Ethernet network settings including IP address subnet mask IP gateway security settings Ethernet mode physical address and host name Figure 43 Ethernet configuration menu 1 2 4 5 7 8 X Ethernet Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 IP Address Subnet Mask IP Gateway Change Change Change Change Toggle Change To
21. Click on the Configuration link This will access the Configuration Menu containing CURRENT NEW readings for DHCP Use DHCP The following 3 DHCP relevant options are also listed Ethernet IP address Subnet mask and e Gateway IP address Tips for manipulating DHCP within Visual Manager 1 2 3 To change the current state of DHCP change its status to enabled or disabled submit the change and then reboot To reboot click the Reboot link from the main menu select Yes in the confirmation message and then submit The gateway address should have the same subnetwork 1 three bytes as the IP address For example an IP address of 192 168 100 93 may have a gateway of 192 168 100 1 However an unavailable gateway value appearing under the CURRENT section of the Configuration menu means the DHCP server was unable to get the gateway address If this happens contact the network administrator to make sure the DHCP server is providing this information or manually change the gateway address yourself Now you should be able to access the new IP address displayed within the Ethernet Configuration menu using Visual Manager e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 121 122 Enabling DHCP on the HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Glossary adapter address addressing mode AL_PA arbitrated loop area auto assigned mapping baud bus channel clusters interface card inter
22. LUNs where each entry in the table is either empty or contains device address information needed to route commands to the appropriate device The FC port on the interface card has a set of maps which include user defined maps and a few special predefined maps There are currently four special predefined maps Indexed Auto Assigned SCC and Port O device maps Until a user configures the interface card otherwise the default map setting is Indexed The Indexed map is initially empty and can be modified by the user however this is not recommended 24 Device management The Auto Assigned map is built dynamically and contains all the devices found during discovery This map changes automatically any time the discovery process finds a change in the devices attached to the interface card This map can be displayed but cannot be modified directly by the user The SCC map is only available on the FC port and contains a single entry LUN O is an interface card LUN and access to devices behind the controller is handled by using SCC logical unit addressing When a host sends a command to the interface card the interface card selects which map to use based on the ID of the host sending the command For FC ports the host ID is the World Wide Name For SCSI buses the host ID is the initiator ID O 15 When a host is unknown to the interface card or is not attached to a specific map the interface card uses the default setting for mapping The de
23. a switching network called a fabric a point to point link or an arbitrated loop Fibre Channel is a generalized transport mechanism that has no protocol of its own or native input output command set but can transport any existing Upper Level Protocols ULPs such as SCSI and IP One of three existing Fibre Channel topologies in which 2 to 126 devices are interconnected serially in a single loop circuit The arbitrated loop topology supports all classes of service and guarantees in order delivery of frames when the source and destination are on the same loop FCP defines a Fibre Channel mapping layer FC 4 that uses FC PH services to transmit SCSI command data and status information between a SCSI initiator and a SCSI target Using FCP enables transmission and receipt of SCSI commands data and status across the Fibre Channel using the standard Fibre Channel frame and sequence formats The smallest indivisible unit of information transfer used by Fibre Channel Frames are used for transferring data associated with a sequence Frame size depends on the hardware implementation and is independent of the ULP or the application software File Transfer Protocol A physical component that manages the functions of the FC O layer which is the physical characteristic of the media and interface including drivers transceivers connectors and cables Mounts on a FC adapter card and connects the interface card to a FC host Also referred to as a Phy
24. as shown in Figure 7 To install two cards place the second card in the bottom level middle slot as also shown in Figure 7 1 Using a 1 Phillips screwdriver remove the center option slot cover plate see Figure 7 2 Carefully insert the card into the upper and lower guide rails of the option slot as shown in Figure 8 Resistance is felt as the card connects with the library backplane Apply only enough force to seat the card snugly then rotate the ejector handles inward Figure 8 Installing the interface card 16 Installation cabling and setup 3 Using the 1 Phillips screwdriver tighten the captive screws in both of the black ejector handles as shown in Figure 9 Figure 9 Screws in the black ejector handles e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 17 4 Cable the library as shown in Figure 10 for a 5U library or Figure 11 for a 10U library Figure 10 5U cable configuration nt mull TP 12000 5 poongodag El Il as ies f a JE i Ea 00000000 ol m nl f ae d at 18 Installation cabling and setup 5 Connect each power cord Turn on the master power switch for each power supply see Figure 12 Figure 12 Power supply and power cord 6 Turn the library on by pressing the Power button on the GUI control panel see Figure 3 on page 14 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 19 Interfaces and conn
25. created with only the hosts that need to communicate with the library and the drives assigned to it Verity devices It may be useful to connect the SCSI target devices you are attempting to use to the native SCSI interface to verify that the devices are functional SCSI target devices can be connected to a host SCSI bus to verify they are functional Verity host configuration In some cases it may be that the FC host bus adapter or host device driver may not be working properly Check the configuration of these elements It may be useful to check the release notes for the driver provided to see if there are any specific issues or required configuration It may also be useful to ensure that you are using a current version of the host bus adapter driver and firmware PRLI data The interface card supports the discovery mechanism The interface card returns the PRLI response data as specified in Table 8 Table 8 HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card PRLI response data ltem PRLI Command Code Page Length Payload Length Type Code Type Code Extension OPA IPE Response Code Originator Process Associator Responder Process Associator Initiator Function Target Function Command Data Mixed Allowed Data Response Mixed Allowed 96 Troubleshooting Read XFER_RDY Disabled Write XFER_RDY Disabled Verify HBA device driver information Check the HBA device drive
26. in for your browser Internet access is required to verity the signature for the HP FTP applet and to download the JAVA If the applet does not load obtain the latest version of JRE Java Runtime Environment from www java com To open an FIP session 1 Enter the User Name Password and the IP address of the interface card 2 Click Connect 3 Select the local file to upload or download If necessary click Browse to scroll through a file list The following file types can be uploaded to the interface card Configuration cfg Firmware dlx The following file types can be downloaded from the interface card e Configuration cfg Traces for the current boot cycle curtrace tx Traces from the previous boot cycle prvtrace txt 4 Click Binary Transfer mode 5 Choose the desired task To download a file click Get To upload a file click Put 50 Visual manager user interface NOTE Ifa valid firmware or configuration file is uploaded to the interface card an automatic reboot occurs once the file has been received The interface card cannot be accessed from the Visual Manager UI during the time that the reboot is in process which is approximately 30 seconds Trace settings configuration This menu allows the configuration of Trace Settings see Figure 34 Figure 34 Trace settings configurations screen ca invent MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statis
27. port connection The 3 pin connector on the interface card provides a serial port that is compatible with RS 232 signaling levels The interface card is designed to communicate with a terminal or any operating system using a terminal emulator The baud rate data bits stop bits parity and flow control of both the interface card and the host system must use the same settings The Autobaud feature described below provides an effective method to set the baud rate of the interface card and host system Autobaud feature The Autobaud feature automatically configures the baud rate on the interface card Once you set the baud rate in the terminal emulator wait until the interface card completes the Power On Self Test POST and then the firmware initialization process This can take up to 90 seconds during which time the POST and initialization information may or may not be visible on the terminal or terminal emulator After this process has completed you can press the Enter key slowly 7 or 8 times or just type shift z and the interface card automatically detects the baud rate being used by the serial port The baud rate is then saved in the interface card s configuration and is retained through future power cycles Ef NOTE Pressing the Enter key before the POST has completed is of no benefit to the Autobaud feature Wait at least 90 seconds until both the POST and the Firmware Initialization processes have completed before pressing the Enter key
28. provide the same IP address to the interface card This setup can be useful for remote management of the interface card via Telnet or Visual Manager Because the method of setting up a lease reservation varies depending on the DHCP server being used HP recommends that you contact your Network Administrator for assistance Select 8 to change security settings including the user name and password User names and passwords should be unique and kept confidential and HP recommends using a combination of letters and numbers when creating user names and passwords e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 61 Fibre Channel configuration This menu allows for setting the Fibre Channel Address method Hard Address value discovery mode WWN overrides tape backup settings default map value and FC port mode Figure 44 Fibre Channel configuration menu Fibre Channel Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Fibre Channel Configuration Port 0 FC Link Status DOWN Node Name Ox100000E0 02031751 Port Name Ox100000E0 02231751 Port Mode N_Port Mode Discovery Mode Manual Discovery Only Buffered Tape Writes Enabled Queue Depth 5 Current Default Map Indexed Port Speed 2 GigaBit 1 Change World Wide Name High 2 Change World Wide Name Low 3 Toggle Port Mode 4 Change ALPA Value 5 Toggle Discovery Mode 6 Toggle Buffered Tape Writes 7 Change Buffere
29. remove gaps Ethernet 60 Fibre Channel 62 max SCSI bus speed 67 parallel SCSI 65 real time clock 78 SCSI initiator 66 trace and event 75 event 76 special event 77 trace 75 power up messages 57 conventions document 7 text symbols 7 current map default Fibre Channel Visual Manager 43 D date configuration Visual Manager 39 declaration of conformity 104 device management 23 discovery 24 FC arbitrated loop addressing 23 hard addressing 23 soft addressing 23 FC switched fabric 23 Fibre Channel 23 HBA 24 LUN 24 SCSI 23 DHCP 117 DHCP setup Visual Manager 36 discovery mode Fibre Channel Visual Manager 42 SCSI Visual Manager 44 display trace and assertion 87 copy of trace buffer 87 disposal Taiwan EPA battery 107 document conventions related documentation 7 documentation HP web site 7 E Ethernet connection 21 European Union regulatory compliance notice 105 event log clearing Visual Manager 54 configuration of Visual Manager 52 viewing Visual Manager 53 F FCC Federal Communications Commission Class A Equipment compliance notice 103 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 129 Class B Equipment compliance notice 103 declaration of conformity 104 modifications 104 Fibre Channel hosts viewing and changing Visual Manager 47 Fibre Channel maps editing entries Visual Manager 47 viewing and changing Visual Manager 47 Fibre Channel port buffered tape writes Visual
30. retained EY NOTE The interface card supports only one Telnet session at a time From most Windows systems users can start a Telnet session from the DOS or Command prompt using the following steps 1 From the Windows Start menu open the DOS or Command prompt window 2 At the gt prompt enter the following command TELNET lt IP address gt where lt IP address gt is the IP address of the interface card This starts a Telnet session window for the interface card 3 Enter root for the default user name and password for the default password HP recommends that you change the user name and password as soon as possible see System menu on page 34 4 Access configuration options in the same way used for the serial interface 5 To exit the Telnet session select the Disconnect option from your Telnet client utility In most Telnet utilities this option is available as a menu item If working from the Command Prompt in Windows simply close the window to end the session Visual manager The interface card allows any standard Internet Web browser to view and change the interface card s configuration with the Visual Manager interface Information is dynamically generated in an HTML format by the interface card so that Web browsers can access it To access Visual Manager enter the IP address of the interface card into the Address field of a Web browser Or you can enter a URL using a host name defi
31. server may also allow you to set up an extended lease reservation for an IP address by providing the server with the Ethernet MAC address of the interface card This configures the DHCP server e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 27 to always provide the same IP address to the interface card This setup can be useful for remote management of the interface card via Telnet Because the method of setting up a lease reservation varies depending on the DHCP server being used HP recommends that you contact your Network Administrator for assistance For more information about enabling DHCP on the interface card see Enabling DHCP on the HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card on page 117 Command Line Interface The interface card is capable of holding Telnet sessions for configuration purposes Access to the configuration menus via the serial port will be disabled when a Telnet session is connected To open a Telnet session the IP address of the interface card and a Telnet client utility are required Ef NOTE Rebooting the interface card closes the Telnet session After the interface card reboots and completes POST the user must restart or re open the Telnet session Ef NOTE Resetting to factory defaults from the Telnet interface does not affect Ethernet activity User configured values for the IP address gateway and subnet mask are retained after the interface card reboots User name and password are not
32. settings you may click on ports and buses Security Settings MAIN MENU User Name Home Password System Ports Confirm Password Discovery Mapping Statistics Passwords must be 8 to 11 characters in length Utilities Report Reboot SYSTEM MENU Serial Network Active Fabric User Real Time Clock RESET MENU Factory Settings Reset User settings User Name default root is any alphanumeric combination Passwords must be 8 to 11 characters in length Password default password is any alphanumeric combination Confirm Password The user name and password should be unique and kept confidential HP recommends using a combination of letters and numbers when creating the user name and password NOTE These security settings affect all user interfaces of the interface card 38 Visual manager user interface Real Time Clock configuration The Real Time Clock screen is used to set the system time and date see Figure 22 Figure 22 Real Time Clock screen o SSB eo 0 oi B o 95 57 ON HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Time Status Date Monday 3 13 2006 MAIN MENU Time 10 35 21 Home System Ports Date Time Settings Discovery Date Settings Time Settings Mapping Statistics Month Hours Utilities j ay v ute Report D 13 DayofWeek Monday Minutes Reboot Year 2006 Seconds SYSTEM MENU Serial Network A
33. such as personal computers The FCC requires devices in both classes to bear a label indicating the interference potential of the device as well as additional operating instructions for the user The rating label on the device shows which class A or B the equipment falls into Class B devices have an FCC logo or FCC ID on the label Class A devices do not have an FCC logo or FCC ID on the label Once the class of the device is determined refer to the following corresponding statement Emissions classification Class A equipment This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions may cause harmful interference to radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user is required to correct the interference at personal expense Class B equipment This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation This equ
34. the Mapping menu is used to create or edit LUN maps and assign them to hosts see Figure 30 Figure 30 Fibre Channel port O map settings p gt E UN F a rA HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Es FC PORTO MAP SETTINGS MAIN MENU 3 Initiator slots in use out of 250 per router Home System Host Map gt 08 8BOFOAS3 FC Port Name Low Indexed Mapping C92D5FAS FC Port Name Low Indexed Statistics Utilities Report Reboot Add Host Add Map MAPPING MENU FC Porto Select Host Select Map BBOFOAE3 FC Port Name Low Indexed v EavView Clone the Currently Selected Map type a new name below and click Clone NOTE Indexed Auto Assigned and SCC maps cannot be deleted or renamed NOTE SCC and Auto Assigned maps cannot be cloned Each physical port bus on the interface card can have the following maps Table 5 Device map types Generated by Editable Auto Assigned System Indexed default System Port O Device Map System Generated User Edited SCC System Each map has a unique name and map ID one of the maps must be identified as the current map Fibre Channel mapping tasks Configuration tasks for Fibre Channel mapping includes e Viewing and changing Fibre Channel map information Viewing and changing Fibre Channel host information Each task is discussed in the following paragraphs 46 Visual m
35. turn off power to the library by pressing the Power button see Figure 3 NOTE This process automatically moves the robot to the parked position Figure 3 GUI Menu sl hp StorageWorks Status MSL6000 series library Power 2 From the back of the library turn off the master power switch for each power supply 3 Remove the AC power cord s see Figure 4 Figure 4 Power supply and AC power cords 14 Installation cabling and setup 4 Remove the cables from the robotics controller see Figure 5 Figure 5 Removing cables from the robotics controller Removing an existing interface card If you are replacing a card that is already installed in the library save the configuration settings using the FTP user interface ftp gt login gt bin gt get cfg lt path gt lt filename gt cfg See Using the FTP interface on page 89 To remove the interface card 1 From the back of the library locate the card to be removed see Figure 6 2 Using a 1 Phillips screwdriver loosen the captive screw in each black ejector handle 3 Push the ejector handles outward and pull the card out of the library Figure 6 Removing an interface card from the library e1 200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 15 Installing a new card NOTE To avoid damage to the library make sure cards are installed in the correct slots To install one card place it in the top level middle slot
36. unit is transferring data If an Activity indicator stays continually lit without corresponding target device activity there may be a problem with the SCSI bus configuration Verify the SCSI bus configuration e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 93 Ethernet 10 100 When lit these green indicators signify Ethernet link status and activity If either of these indicators fail to flicker or stay continuously lit there may be a problem with the network connection or configuration Verify the network connection and configuration The port must be connected to a Ethernet network to function properly Beacon This blue indicator can blink or light continuously for unit identification or other management purposes that are described in more detail in the user documentation for the library management system Basic verification Serial port problems If you experience trouble communicating with the serial port verify the configuration of the host terminal or terminal emulation program The interface card requires the baud rate to be set correctly 8 data bits 1 stop bit and no parity Flow control should be set to none or XON XOFF and may cause problems if set to hardware Some terminal programs may not support baud rates higher than 19200 so a lower baud rate may be required If problems persist you may want to check the cabling or try a different host Be sure the Scroll Lock key on the keyboard of the host comput
37. 54504 baba NOE EO eb add ido SLES DARREN 51 Current previous and last assert trace displays n on nnana nae 52 Clear current trace buffer or assert trace buffer 0 cette nee 52 o A O Oy Ree ea es 52 Eveni l g display A 53 Clear event A A aees cheek ets es 54 SCS command trackihgis 4 ssoi ae a a i e bh me E a E oh ele ote alow ad ek el ale ee att ek 54 REPO MENU X ays snaa ra wa ai poking pete dp een Agee Gabe A eS 55 Rebootoption 5464 45 mowai iii d0b0 48 Vawhe Vad cee BOGS LeU EE Thon ek heed 56 6 Using the Commond line Interface sesion rr ERA 57 Power up Messages 57 o A A At Wr sn 58 Baud rate configuration ra ia kee 59 Ehemeteanfiqurdillans cie ee ii dc Sed A decd a dd di 60 Fibre Channel configuration cocinar rd A dd IA A EI 62 Parallel SCSI configuratiom esasi dt ok eae ey cee AS ES de de we ee we 65 SCI ME oa da dopa tes A A a aoe iy asa 66 Maximum SCSI bus speed menu ios ic cd io did ri cd ic deca 67 Device MAPPING soies iaa cas leo BAS min a atin ia Baas A di 68 Adding CAA A O ahh BOS WE a A 69 Creating an entry 2 eens 70 REMOVE JAPS i iwi bok biwi deta beth bebbewhe dd one iweb did die e ens 71 Deleting an entry narrada id ta en os ES SS 71 Adding Gost sia saree he hfe aeon e le BMA he Uae hp ake Te Wa E We ah DED A De te a aca 72 Deleting a Mostrar a a dida Roe ORR OSS AAS 73 Editing ahost niie pt da dow ind elie h eka bd ein tee bam bd eae ae a ek eed amp amp 73 Trace and event settings configuration n
38. C20 El Host was successfully added to the host list 72 Using the Command Line Interface Following the successful addition of the host the host list is displayed again and the user can make sure that the host information is correct Deleting a host Select D to delete a host from the host list The operator is asked to enter an index for the host that is displayed in the very left column of the table and asked for confirmation Editing a host Select E to edit host information Old information is displayed on the screen and the user is asked to enter information to replace it or just hit Enter to keep old information All of the information entered by the user is validated The following is an example of editing a host list for an FCP Port Figure 54 Editing host list for FCP port Host List Edit Display X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Map FCP Port 0 Name Indexed FCP Port 0 Host List 1 Hi 0x210000E0 Hi 0x200000 0 Default Lo 0x8B02C20E Lo 0x8B02C20E PortID Ox0000EF Page 1 out of 1 pages Total Number of Hosts 1 Select Host Number 1 1 to associate host with the Current Map Enter N Next P Prev A Add D Delete E Edit X Exit gt e Select Host to edit X Cancel gt 1 Old Host Name Enter desired new name lt enter gt
39. CE ARRAY_CTLR_DEVICE l j N ENCLOSURE_SRV_DEVICE 13 Enter desired Device Type gt 1 Enter device target id gt 5 Enter device lun id gt 0 Ef NOTE Ifthe device being added is a SCSI device the user is also asked to enter Target ID and LUN ID for the device Target ID must already be defined in the SCSI Configuration Otherwise adding a device is not permitted NOTE Select MEDIUM_CHGR_DEVICE for the library or robot controller Ef NOTE When creating a device that does not exist it will be displayed with Down status 70 Using the Command Line Interface Remove gaps EY NOTE SCSI devices attached to a Fibre Channel port must be mapped as sequential FC LUNs starting at LUN number 00 Skipping LUN numbers is not recommended when mapping FC LUNs because FC Discovery stops the discovery process whenever an empty LUN position is found This option removes any incremental gaps in the sequence of LUNs listed in the table Deleting an entry The user selects a LUN ID Figure 51 Deleting an entry Select LUN to delete X Cancel D DeleteMulitple gt 0 Are you sure you want to delete LUN 0 Y Confirm X Cancel gt y Select D to delete multiple LUNs EY NOTE When deleting multiple LUNs the user can list the LUNs to delete in a comma or space delimited format Select 3 from the Map Edit menu to clear that is remove all entr
40. FF Select U to update current operating trace levels This option forces the currently displayed trace settings to become effective immediately without requiring a reboot or power cycle EY NOTE Be sure to set the clock and date in the Real Time Clock Configuration menu so event logging is accurate Event configuration This option allows selecting the event threshold for filtering event logging The asterisk denotes the current setting Figure 59 Event filter settings Event Filter Settings X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Disable Event Logging 6 Warning events 2 Emergency events 7 Notify events 3 Alert events 8 Info events 4 Critical events 9 Debug events 5 Error events 0 Log all events U Update Current Operating Trace Levels X Return to Previous menu Enter event threshold lt 0 9 gt gt 76 Using the Command Line Interface Enter 1 to disable event logging Enter 2 through 9 to log the specified events or higher Enter O to log all events Select U to send event configuration changes to the interface card now NOTE Event logging captures over 2000 events and then starts overwriting the log when full EY NOTE Be sure to correctly set the clock and date in the Real Time Clock Configuration menu so that event logging is accurate Special event logging configuration This option allows selecting the special event log se
41. HBA or switch are of corresponding types When using optical media verify that the attached device is using non OFC type optical devices Also make sure that the interface card is configured with the same speed as the device it is connected to and that the host is assigned to a LUN map filled with the devices it should be able to communicate with Verity SCSI devices in Windows NT If running FC to SCSI mapping mode open the NT Control Panel select SCSI Adapters and double click on the FC HBA The SCSI devices should be listed If no devices are listed verify the interface card configuration FC HBA configuration and cabling e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 95 If devices are listed verify FC HBA mapping mode or AL_PA addresses on the interface card Verify configuration A number of configuration changes may result in an invalid configuration If you are in doubt about the configuration restore the interface card to the factory default configuration and proceed to configure the unit a step at a time verifying the functionality of the configuration as changes are made Verify mapping Verify that all desired devices have been discovered and mapped If using Indexed or SCC mapping try swapping to Auto assigned to see if this solves the problem NOTE HP recommends that you DO NOT use Auto Assigned long term as it exposes the library and drives to the entire SAN Instead a custom map should be
42. HCP makes network administration easier the larger the network the greater the benefit DHCP accommodates larger networks because it can assign temporary IP addresses for a specified time interval DHCP frees network administrators from having to configure each interface card or host manually Other benefits of a DHCP environment include No additional address configuration is required for client hosts e IP addresses can be reused or leased for specific time periods IP address assignment is better managed For example if the IP address for an interface card in a network changes and 250 client computers have to be updated with the new address you do not have to manually reconfigure every workstation Without DHCP permanent IP address configuration is the only option This means a network administrator is required to manually configure a permanent IP address for each individual interface card or client host Permanent IP addresses require more network resources but are useful when dealing with smaller LAN environments Without dynamic address assignment interface cards and hosts have to be configured manually one by one IP addresses must be managed to avoid duplicate use and changes must be applied to clients by hand Configuration information is not centralized and it is difficult to get a view of all interface card or host configurations The use of TCP IP and DHCP both contribute to networking and the growth of the Internet TCP IP
43. HP StorageWorks e 200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide UNA OT NT AD577 96004 Part number AD577 96004 D First edition May 2006 invent Legal and notice information O Copyright 2006 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 This document contains proprietary information which is protected by copyright No part of this document may be photocopied reproduced or translated into another language without the prior written consent of Hewlett Packard The information is provided as is without warranty of any kind and is subject to change without notice The only warranties for HP products and services are set forth in the express warranty statements accompanying such products and services Nothing herein should be construed as constituting an additional warranty HP shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors or omissions contained herein Adobe and Acrobat are trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated Intel and Itanium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and oth
44. Houston Texas 77269 2000 e 1 281 514 3333 To identify this product refer to the part Regulatory Model Number or product number found on the product Modifications The FCC requires the user to be notified that any changes or modifications made to this device that are not expressly approved by Hewlett Packard Company may void the user s authority to operate the equipment Cables Connections to this device must be made with shielded cables with metallic RFI EMI connector hoods in order to maintain compliance with FCC Rules and Regulations Laser device All HP systems equipped with a laser device comply with safety standards including International Electrotechnical Commission IEC 825 With specific regard to the laser the equipment complies with laser product performance standards set by government agencies as a Class 1 laser product The product does not emit hazardous light Laser safety warning A WARNING To reduce the risk of exposure to hazardous radiation Do not try to open the laser device enclosure There are no user serviceable components inside Do not operate controls make adjustments or perform procedures to the laser device other than those specified herein Allow only HP authorized service technicians to repair the laser device 104 Regulatory compliance and safety International notices and statements Canadian notice avis Canadien Class A equipment This Class A digital apparatus meets
45. List 9 Activate Mapping and Save X Return to previous menu Command gt Select 1 from the Device Mapping Main menu to display all the maps defined by the system for the current protocol port and to choose one of the maps from the list to make it a current map The map selected from this list is the one used by the interface card to direct data to the appropriate targets and initiators EY NOTE Because the entire list of maps may not fit on one screen select N or P to go back and forth between screens displaying more maps Select X to return to the Device Mapping Main menu Enter the number from the column on the left side of the table to select a map and make it Current For example entering 3 from the picture above would select the map named SCC Map on Fibre Channel Port O and make it a Current map Select 2 from the Device Mapping Main menu to display the content of the current map This option displays all the entries in the map Information in the local part of the address left depends on the type of protocol for which the map is defined The specific device address information depends on the protocol port where the device resides Mapping a device to the same port where it resides is not allowed that is you can not map a disk on FCP Port O to an address on FCP Port 0 Using the Command Line Interface EY NOTE Because the entire list of maps may not fit on one screen select N or P to go back
46. Logical Unit a subdivision of a SCSI target For SCSI 2 each SCSI target supports up to sixteen LUNs LUN O to LUN 15 Using LUNs the FC host can address multiple peripheral devices that may share a common interface card Low Voltage Differential Single Ended A table which is indexed by sequential LUN values indicating selected BUS TARGET LUN devices It is used by the interface card to perform Fibre Channel to SCSI operations by default megabyte There are 8 bits in a byte The main PCA of the interface card that provides a physical and logical connection between Fibre Channel and SCSI devices A device that allows two or more signals to be transmitted simultaneously on a single channel A FC term defining a Node port A FC defined hardware entity that performs data communication over the FC link It is identifiable by a unique Worldwide Name It can act as an originator or a responder A FC term indicating a unique address identifier by which an N_Port is uniquely known It consists of a Domain most significant byte an Area and a Port each 1 byte long The N_Port identifier is used in the Source Identifier S_ID and Destination Identifier D_ID fields of a FC frame A field value under the FC Status Menu The unique FC identifier a 64 bit value the factory assigns to the interface card e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 125 offline online originator point to point por
47. Manager 43 configuration Visual Manager 42 Configuration screen illustrated 42 default map Visual Manager 43 discovery mode Visual Manager 42 performance mode Visual Manager 43 port mode Visual Manager 42 firmware download 88 FTP accessing Visual Manager 50 FTP interface 89 backup 89 backup restore 89 event log 90 firmware update 9 restore 89 trace buffer 90 G German noise declaration 106 H help obtaining 8 host lists editing Fibre Channel Visual Manager 47 HP address for FCC questions 104 authorized reseller 8 storage web site 8 Subscriber s choice web site 8 technical support 8 telephone number FCC questions 104 I O configuration 130 Visual Manager 41 identifying product components 13 IEC EMC worldwide regulatory compliance notice 105 inband SCSI 3 commands 109 initiator IDs SCSI Visual Manager 44 installation 14 installing an interface card 16 interface card connections 20 interfaces 20 Ethernet 21 Fibre Channel 20 SCSI 20 serial 21 autobaud 2 IP address Visual Manager 36 IP gateway Visual Manager 36 J Japan regulatory compliance notice 106 K Korean regulatory compliance notice 106 L laser radiation warning 104 regulatory compliance notice 104 link status Fibre Channel Visual Manager 42 M mapping tasks Fibre Channel changing the name of the host Visual Manager 47 default current map Visual Manager 43 viewing and changing Visual Manager 47 N ne
48. OT be edited even though the user is able to edit the Indexed map e Auto assigned contains all the SCSI devices that are attached to the interface card e SCC Performance Mode default 4 Gb s toggles between 1 Gb s 2 Gb s and 4 Gb s NOTE If Performance Mode is set incorrectly and the interface card is plugged into a Loop or Fabric the unit will not light the LNK LED and may receive Framing errors due to the incorrect Fibre Channel link speed Force FCP Response Code toggles between Disabled and Enabled for support of HP specific HBAs SCSI bus configuration When a SCSI bus is selected in the Ports menu the SCSI Bus Configuration screen is displayed see Figure 26 Figure 26 SCSI Bus O 1 configuration screens gt Sm o oo o b oe f 9 e 0 05 E 8 a E j vA HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses SS SCSI BUS 1 CONFIGURATION SETTINGS MAIN MENU Name Actions Home System Primary Initiator ID 7 Ports Discovery Discovery Enabled v Discovery Delay seconds 30 Mapping Bus Reset on Boot Statistics am Utilities Report SUBMIT Reboot To modify the Delay time both the Discovery and Bus Reset on Boot settings must be enabled AAA Please note that the total Delay time of all buses directly affects the bootup time SCSI OVERRIDE SETTINGS Overrides e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 43
49. S e INQUIRY General commands Following is a description of a general use SCSI 3 command For more information about the other general use commands please contact your service representative Report LUNs command The interface card supports the Report LUNs command The Report LUNs command will return a list of Logical Unit Numbers LUNs that can receive commands The format of the report LUNs command is shown in Table 12 Table 12 Format of Report LUNs command Operation Code OxA0 Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved MSB Allocation Length LSB Reserved Control Byte e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 109 The interface card returns the LUN Parameters as defined in Table 13 Table 13 Report LUNs Parameter List 0 MSB 1 LUN list length LSB Reserved 2 3 4 5 Reserved 6 7 Reserved Reserved LUN list First LUN Last LUN Ef NOTE The LUN list length is the number of LUNs times 8 All LUNs are reported and will appear in the host s map Inquiry command The format of the Inquiry command is shown in Table 14 Table 14 Format of LUN Inquiry command Operation Code 12h Reserved Page Code or Operation Code Reserved Allocation Length Control The interface card returns the LUN Inquiry Data as defined in Table 16 110 Inb
50. S BST e e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 105 Japanese notice Korean Safety Battery CRE FAC 782 CV SARI ITVCCIV 7 BAY CWE LES ROMMIe BRA FAV COBB UE RE RSA ER BRA VCCI OLE CHESS 7 F ABRRIPRE CT CORBI ZERA CHATS ZAM ELTWETA CORED PART LEY a RIE LT MASHAL SMBs SHOT ENET ARH E ES TELOR RWS LT FAV VCCIS Y BAY TWO BAIL KORICCIER FSV TOE FRO RES PRES AER BRA VCC DAME ESQ TT AARRNRE CYT COREA AER HEAT Sb BR HEI XHMITF ADD ET COBACIMEAS DORR AT HELIBRENZLCERHVETF notices Prop Af SE ASAE ol BS FAH AREY ES TUAE Mole 7GSLe MEHM SFH cE statement A WARNING This product contains one lithium manganese dioxide battery The e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card contains one Snaphat lithium battery e The lithium battery is located in the upper left corner of the board is yellow in color and can be removed with a flat blade screwdriver Lithium may be considered a hazardous material Dispose of these batteries in accordance with local state and federal laws In addition Do not attempt to recharge the battery if removed from the interface card Do not expose the battery to water or to temperatures higher than 60 C 140 F Do not disassemble crush puncture short external contacts or dispose of in fire or water Replace batteries only with the designated HP spares Batteries battery packs and accumulators should not be disposed o
51. SCSI bus configuration settings Primary Initiator ID default 7 must be a unique ID e Discovery toggles between Enabled and Disabled Enabled by default Bus Reset on Boot toggles between Enabled and Disabled When enabled the interface card automatically resets SCSI buses during a power up or reboot of the library e Discovery Delay is the wait time after a power up or reboot before discovering SCSI devices HP recommends setting the value to at least 30 seconds to ensure that all SCSI devices complete their individual power ups SCSI Override Settings e Overrides Discovery menu Accessed from the Main menu the Discovery menu is used to view existing and discover new Target devices see Figure 27 Figure 27 Discovery screen o AA o 0 o o 3 oe o L_E i 3 z 4 pe ae G HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses A Perform Discovery on all Ports and Buses El MAIN MENU FC PORT 0 DEVICES Home System There are no devices attached to this port at this time Ports SCSI BUS 0 DEVICES Discovery Mapping Bus Tgt Lun Type Status Xrate Speed Offset Width Flags IDP Maps Device Description Statistics 0 0 0 CHGR UP 20 15 WIDE 0x00 0 1 HP MSL6000 Series Q hie 0 TAPE UP 160 U160 120 WIDE 0x02 0 1 HP SDLT600 2323 epo Reboot SCSI BUS 1 DEVICES PECOVERT ERY Bus Tgt Lun Type Status Xrate Speed Offset Width Flags IDP Maps Device Description A
52. Status DISABLED 1 Network configures Ethernet settings e Active Fabric configures Active Fabric settings User configures user security settings NETWORK Name MAC Address IP Address Subnet Mask IP Gateway Ethernet Mode DHCP Client Hostname REAL TIME CLOCK e Real Time Clock configures system date and time Reset menu e Factory Settings Reset restores factory default settings 34 Visual manager user interface Status 00 E0 02 E3 17 48 15 27 97 33 DHCP 255 255 240 0 DHCP 15 27 96 1 10 100Mbps Enabled Router Status Friday 3 10 2006 12 26 09 Serial configuration The Serial screen is used to change the baud rate for the serial port see Figure 18 NOTE If the Autobaud feature is being used it may not be necessary to set the baud rate Figure 18 Serial screen Seo h E O HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses o Y o MAIN MENU Home Serial Setting cr BaudRate 115200 v Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot The current baud rate setting is displayed Baud rate choices are e 9600 e 19200 e 38400 e 57600 e 115200 NOTE HP recommends setting the baud rate to 115200 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 35 Network configuration The Network screen is used to enter Ethernet configuration settings see Figure 19 Fig
53. X XXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Baud Rate Configuration 2 Ethernet Configuration 3 Fibre Channel Configuration 4 Parallel SCSI Configuration 5 Device Mapping 6 Trace and Event Settings Configuration 7 Real Time Clock Configuration 8 Active Fabric Configuration A Save Configuration B Restore Last Saved Configuration C Reset to Factory Defaults X Return to main menu 118 Enabling DHCP on the HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Select 2 The following menu appears Figure 82 Ethernet configuration menu Ethernet Configuration Menu X X XX XXXXXX XXXXXX XXX_ XXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 IP Address 1 1 1 1 Subnet Mask z 25925572950 IP Gateway z 0000 Ethernet Physical Address 08 06 07 05 03 09 Ethernet Mode 10 100Mbps Auto Neg Hostname DHCP Configuration Disabled 1 Change IP Address 2 Change IP Subnet Mask 3 Change IP Gateway 4 Change Ethernet Physical Address 5 Toggle Ethernet Mode 6 Change Hostname 7 Toggle DHCP Configuration 8 Change Security Settings X Return to previous menu Select 7 to toggle the DHCP setting When DHCP is enabled this activates Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol and allows the interface card to be assigned a dynamic IP address from a DHCP server located on the Ethernet network used by the interface card For descriptions of other menu selections refer to Interface card manage
54. aana 13 Removal and installation 0 ce ce ee eee eee eee eee ees 14 Removing an existing interface card 6 nanara 15 Installing di new cafd bi tke eek eee OLS RE Oe AAA Dee oo ee xe eee oy REY 16 Interfaces and connections 0 nauuna e bee e eee e eens 20 Fibre Channel connections 0 0 0 000 eee eee eee eee eee es 20 SEO NCONNECI N ra a a is chs o a cya ata OG hae tod ateo eet tse ts 20 Ethernet connection 0 0 0 0 ee eee ee eee eee eee eens 21 Serial port connection e dd A A A AA AA 21 Autobaud feature 21 Setting up serial port communications ur a add a dd Ow OO wd 22 3 Device manageme i 2ctcee sti ker TAE tT Ioh Gay TEET se senate ciene es 23 SCSI b s configuration os Gee eg a tea ka eaa kia a a Rie aa K AE en A RE e EA reer ae 23 FC por CON UM ss 25 5h BS che arien i enun A A RA RES E RS i 23 FC arbitrated loop addressing onono daa RI a a bi ado ra gc 23 A ASN ESS 23 Hard addressing A O OS 23 FC switched fabric addressing ia a ANA A 23 DISCOVERY s e ea ea ae E A E Rte hd 24 Host bus adapter configuration dora a io 24 Logical unit management n on nananana 24 A Interface card management orcos rior 27 Configuration MeIhGds lt P AE e Ae A 27 Serial port management AE e ia dd Raed adage b 27 Outof band Ethernet management access 0 ete eens 27 Command Line Interface 28 VISIO managet e a ASEH Oa aa ERS NA 28 A A A A A 29 Inband SCSI 3 commands 1 0 eee ee eee eee ee eens 29 e1200 320
55. all requirements of the Canadian Interference Causing Equipment Regulations Cet appareil num rique de la classe A respecte toutes les exigences du R glement sur le mat riel brouilleur du Canada Class B equipment This Class B digital apparatus meets all requirements of the Canadian Interference Causing Equipment Regulations Cet appareil num rique de la classe B respecte toutes les exigences du R glement sur le mat riel brouilleur du Canada European Union notice Products bearing the CE marking comply with the EMC Directive 89 336 EEC and the Low Voltage Directive 73 23 EEC issued by the Commission of the European Community and if this product has telecommunication functionality the R amp TTE Directive 1999 5 EC Compliance with these directives implies conformity to the following European Norms in parentheses are the equivalent international standards and regulations e EN55022 CISPR 22 Electromagnetic Interference EN55024 IEC61000 4 2 IEC61000 4 3 IEC61000 4 4 IEC6 1000 4 5 IEC6 1000 4 6 IEC61000 4 8 IEC61000 4 11 Electromagnetic Immunity Power Quality e EN61000 3 2 IEC6 1000 3 2 Power Line Harmonics EN61000 3 3 IEC6 1000 3 3 Power Line Flicker EN60950 1 IEC60950 1 Product Safety Also approved under UL 60950 1 CSA C22 2 No 60950 1 Safety of Information Technology Equipment BSMI notice Soe ree ASA Agee gt TEER Pei PARE gt RT RESET Tie EBRO gt RASH AREER PRA E
56. anager user interface Viewing and changing Fibre Channel map information Viewing NOTE Port O Device Map is the HP recommended map to be used for editing and assigning oncoming hosts The Indexed default map should not be used for editing even though the user is able to edit this map To view or change current Fibre Channel map information 1 In the Mapping menu screen select the desired map 2 Select Edit View in the Map section of the screen The Fibre Channel Map dialog box is displayed Current map information is shown at the top of the dialog box 3 Enter the new settings and then select the appropriate action button NOTE Bus Target mapping mode is recommended NOTE SCSI devices attached to a Fibre Channel must be mapped as sequential Fibre Channel LUNs starting at LUN number 00 Skipping LUN numbers is not recommended when mapping Fibre Channel LUNs because Fibre Channel Discovery stops the discovery process whenever an empty LUN position is found NOTE Auto Assigned and SCC maps cannot be modified cleared filled or have entries removed NOTE Map settings are saved to memory when any button within the page is selected and changing Fibre Channel host information NOTE HP recommends setting the Index map as the default and allowing it to remain empty while filling a custom map such as Port 0 Device Map with only the hosts that need to communicate with the library or drives
57. and SCSI 3 commands EVPD Page 0x80 If the EVPD bit is set and the Page Code is 0x80 the unit serial number page is returned The format of this page is shown in Table 15 Table 15 Format of EVPD Page 0x80 Device Type Och Page Code 80h Reserved Page Length Serial Number The serial number field is a 16 byte left justified ASCII string Device Identification Page 0x83 If the EVPD bit is set and the Page Code is 0x83 the device identification page is returned as described in SPC 2 section 8 4 4 Table 16 HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card LUN Inquiry Data Item Value Peripheral Qualifier 0x00 Peripheral Device Type Ox0C Indicates Router interface card function RMB 0x00 Device Type Gualifier 0x00 ISO Version 0x00 0x00 0x00 Response Data Format 0x02 SCSI 2 Inquiry Data Format Additional Length 0x20 RelAdr 0x00 Wbus32 0x00 Wbus16 0x00 Sync 0x00 Linked 0x00 CmdQue 0x00 SftRe 0x00 Vendor ID CROSSRDS Product ID interface card interface card Revision Level XXXXX The interface card will only reply to a SCSI Inquiry when using 8 byte LUN field of Ox00 s e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 111 Ef NOTE The Revision Level comes from the last four characters of the build string which appears in the headings for most menu screens 112 Inband SCSI 3 commands
58. and forth between screens displaying more maps Select X to return to the Device Mapping Main menu Select 3 from the Device Mapping Main menu to create a new map This option allows adding a new map for the current protocol port or bus Once the map is created it becomes the current map Select 4 from the Device Mapping Main Menu to delete current map The screen asks for confirmation before deleting the map After the map has been deleted the default map for the current port becomes the current map Maps with names Indexed Auto Assigned or SCC Map may not be removed Select 5 from the Device Mapping Main menu to edit current map This option displays the Map Edit menu and allows user to edit the name of the map change content of the map clear and fill the map Editing an Auto Assigned or SCC Map is not allowed EY NOTE Enter the number of one of the available selections or enter X to exit to the Device Mapping Main menu Select 1 from the Map Edit menu to edit the name of the current map The name of the Indexed map may not be changed Map name also cannot be left empty Select 2 from the Map Edit menu to edit entries in the current map This screen allows the user to navigate up and down the map entries and create or remove entries Device lists are also available to the user to make it easier to identify the device to be mapped Mapping device to its native port bus is not allowed The information needed to create ent
59. anyone who knows the interface card IP address 4 Select the desired menu option to access menus and screens The Password dialog box is displayed See Figure 13 on page 32 for an example of the Password Dialog box e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 31 5 Enter the authorized user name and password The user name and password are case sensitive The default user name is root and the default password is password Figure 13 Password dialog box User name Password NOTE HP recommends changing the user name and password from the defaults NOTE To end the current session of VM the browser window must be closed Navigating the browser to another URL does not end the current session Main menu Visual Manager menu structure Figure 14 Visual Manager menu EF FC Port O SCSI Bus 0 H SCSI Bus O Reset FC Port O SCSI Bus 1 SCSI Bus 1 Mapping FC Port O FTP Trace Current Previous _ Last Assert Clear Current Clear Assert Event Log Event Clear Event SCSI Cmd Utility Settings Traces Traces Traces Traces Traces Settings log Log Tracking Report Results 32 Visual manager user interface Home page The Main menu home page is displayed when Visual Manager VM is accessed The home page contains status information including a physical image of the interface card see Figure 15 Figure 15 Visual Manager Home page O 3 HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To chan
60. bre Channel and SCSI The routing decision is based on paths between address mappings among dispersed initiators and targets Configuration involving at least two interface card routers where one interface card router is in Initiator Mode and another in Target Mode See FC Device or SCSI Device An electrical signal configuration using a pair of lines for data transfer The advantage of differential compared to single ended configuration is a relative high tolerance for common mode noise and crosstalk when used with twisted pair cables In layman s terms this means longer distance A FC term describing the most significant byte in the N_Port Identifier for the FC device It is not used in the FC SCSI hardware path ID It is required to be the same for all SCSI targets logically connected to a FC adapter A FC term for the basic mechanism used for managing an operation An exchange identifies information transfers consisting of one or more related non concurrent sequences that may flow in the same or opposite directions but always in half duplex mode An exchange is identitied by an OX_ID and an RX_ID An FC term that includes FC Arbitrated Loop Switched Fabric and Point to Point See Fibre Channel e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 123 FC AL FC adapter FC device FC port FC SCSI hardware path ID fiber fibre fibre channel FC fibre channel arbitrated loop FC AL fibre chan
61. ct a SCSI cable to one of the SCSI connectors on the unit The interface card should always be installed at the end of the SCSI bus 3 Make sure that the bus is terminated correctly By default the interface card is automatically terminated However the device at the other end of bus must also be terminated Ethernet connection A 10 100BaseT Ethernet connection provides management and configuration access The RJ 45 connector on the unit can be directly connected to a standard 10 100BaseT Ethernet network NOTE You should change the pre filled in settings if you disable DHCP because while they are valid settings a conflict occurs if more then one interface card is on the network with these initial settings Setting the IP network address is recommended but not required in order to configure the interface card from this port The IP network address can be manually assigned or dynamically assigned using DHCP The default network configuration is DHCP but if DHCP is turned off the initial value for the IP address is 1 1 1 1 the Subnet is 255 255 255 0 and the Gateway is 0 0 0 0 Depending on the network environment you may be able to temporarily use the IP address of 1 1 1 1 to configure the interface card For more about the IP network address refer to Network configuration on page 36 Ethernet capabilities include Telnet support for configuration and management and FTP support for other management capabilities Serial
62. ctive Fabric User Real Time Clock RESET MENU Factory Settings Reset Date time settings Date Settings sets the month day and year use a four digit number to represent the year Day of Week sets the day of the week e Time Settings sets the hours minutes and seconds The system clock is a 24 hour clock There is no a m or p m designation Example 1 00 p m is 13 hours OO minutes e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 39 Reset menu The Reset menu is used to reset the interface card to factory default settings see Figure 23 Figure 23 Reset to Factory Default screen O i HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Reset to Factory Defaults To reset the system to the Factory Default settings MAIN MENU select yes and click the submit button Home System No Yes O Ports Discovery Mapping The Factory Default settings will not take effect until Statistics after the system is rebooted Utilities Report Reboot SYSTEM MENU Serial Network Active Fabric User Real Time Clock RESET MENU Factory Settings Reset Current interface card activities are disrupted while the unit resets the configuration to the factory defaults and saves those options to FLASH memory CAUTION Resetting the interface card configuration to the factory defaults deletes custom maps or ma
63. d Enabled 7 Enabled 30 seconds Enabled Enabled The initial screen display of the Ports menu includes summary information about each Fibre Channel port and SCSI bus in the interface card Ports menu tasks Fibre Channel Port 0 configuration changes the Fibre Channel port settings SCSI Bus 0 1 configuration changes SCSI bus settings Each Ports menu option is discussed in the following subsections To view or make changes to a specific port or bus 1 Select the port or bus from the menu bar on the left side of the screen or select the port or bus from the interface card image at the top of the screen 2 Modify the setting 3 Click Submit e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 41 Fibre Channel port configuration 42 When the Fibre Channel port is selected in Ports menu the Fibre Channel Configuration screen is displayed see Figure 25 Figure 25 Fibre Channel port O configuration settings screen F c oi 4 g ec b i O HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses AAA FC PORT 0 CONFIGURATION SETTINGS MAIN MENU Name Home System Link Status Ports Discovery Port Mode Mapping Statistics Use Hard AL_PA Utilities Report Hard AL_PA Settings Reboot Discovery Mode Manual Discovery Only v Buffered Tape Writes Enabled Buffered Tape Queue Depth sy Default Map Indexed Perf
64. d Tape Queue Depth 8 Change Default Map Value 9 Edit FC Override Settings A Toggle Port Speed X Return to previous menu Command gt Ef NOTE For In Band Management to be operational WWN naming schemes must be compliant with IEEE Fibre Channel Format 1 where the left most hexadecimal character the NAA field of the WWN is 1 Further the upper nibble of the third byte the sixth hexadecimal value from the right must be a value of 0 or 1 Select 1 to enter a new value for the World Wide Name High Ordinarily this value should not be changed EY NOTE Resetting factory defaults overwrites any value a user has previously manually entered for the WWN Select 2 to enter a new value for the World Wide Name Low Ordinarily this value should not be changed EY NOTE Resetting factory defaults overwrites any value a user has previously manually entered for the WWN 62 Using the Command Line Interface Select 3 to change the Toggle Port Mode between Auto Sense Soft AL_PA N_Port and Auto Sense Hard AL_PA The default setting is N_Port mode In this mode the FC port tries coming up as a fabric port If the interface card is on a loop and N_Port mode is selected an error in communication may occur In Autosense Soft AL_PA mode the interface card FC port tries to come up as a loop and if not successful then tries to come up as a fabric If the port comes up as a loop it determines wheth
65. e e Serial Ethernet and fibre port configuration e Fibre LUN mapping Assigning LUN maps to Hosts e Trace level settings All of the above settings may be changed and saved Ef NOTE Unless otherwise indicated configuration changes take effect when the system next powers on or reboots Power up messages When the HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card powers on a series of power up messages appear on the terminal or terminal emulation program for the serial port or the Telnet utility for Telnet sessions A series of power up self tests are performed while the library starts which can take up to 90 seconds and messages related to these tests are visible from the serial port If completed successfully the main menu appears as shown in Figure 40 NOTE The illustrations in this chapter use Xs to represent numeric values for certain data fields such as the product release version and the revision of firmware EY NOTE For the serial port if you do not see messages over the Command Line Interface you may need to re check your computer s serial port settings The main menu appears as follows Figure 40 Main menu HP StorageWorks e1200 320 4Gb Interface card X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 18 37 08 1 Perform Configuration 2 System Utilities 3 Display Trace and Assertion History 4 Reboot 5 Download a New Revision of The Firmware Command gt The main menu a
66. e Runtime Report prompt is displayed Figure 71 Runtime Report To save the Report to a file enable your terminal s CAPTURE text mode To start the Report press y any other key cancels the Report y Runtime Report X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 report details appear here ERRERARESRS END Of the Runtime Report ERFAES8 The Report has been completed You may stop the file CAPTURE Press any key to continue The Runtime Report presents a consolidated listing of all system information traces and the event log 84 Using the Command Line Interface Diagnostics mode When this option is selected from the System Utilities menu a confirmation message appears to verify the selection If a response of Y yes is given to the confirmation message current interface card activities are interrupted while the unit restarts itself and enters diagnostics mode The power up messages appear followed by the diagnostics menu Figure 72 System diagnostics mode System Diagnostics Mode X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Perform Ethernet External Loopback Test 2 Perform Fibre Channel Loopback Test X Exit diagnostics mode and reboot Select 1 to perform a loopback test of the Ethernet connection on the interface card unit For the test to be performed correctly an Ethernet loopback connector must be attach
67. e network These previous three options IP address subnet mask and gateway are necessary for effective DHCP e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 117 Setting up DHCP over interface card interfaces Interface cards use three different interfaces which can be used to enable DHCP Serial Telnet and VM The following will describe how to enable and disable DHCP for each interface EY NOTE Located on the interface card is a label that displays the unit s Ethernet MAC Address A network administrator can then use this MAC Address to set up a lease reservation on the DHCP server for the IP address of the interface card This effectively allows the interface card to have a permanent IP address that is assigned by the DHCP server Serial and Telnet interfaces When the user turns on the library and thus the interface card the system reboots and displays the following Main menu on the terminal window Figure 80 Main menu HP StorageWorks el200 320 4Gb Interface interface card X X XX XXXXXX XXXXXX XXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Perform Configuration 2 System Utilities 3 Display Trace and Assertion History 4 Reboot 5 Download a New Revision of The Firmware Copyright C 1998 2004 Crossroads Systems Inc All rights reserved Command gt Select 1 The following menu appears Figure 81 Configuration menu Configuration Menu X X XX XXXXXX XXXXX
68. ections There are four types of interfaces to the interface card gt Fibre Channel e SCSI e 3 pin serial port Ethernet The 3 pin serial and Ethernet ports are used for configuration and management of the interface card For convenience in configuring ports key information is indicated on a label located on the face of the interface card such as WWN name WWP name and Ethernet MAC ID Physical Address Fibre Channel connections Before connecting the interface card to other devices it is important to understand the configuration requirements of the environment to which it is connected Failure to correctly configure a Fibre Channel device may impair the operation of the Storage Area Network SAN to which it is attached Typical installations have the interface card connected to a Switched Fabric environment For an Arbitrated Loop the unit can be directly attached to the Fibre Channel host bus adapter In Fibre Channel switched environments the switch is also directly attached to the interface card Both FC switches and hubs may allow for individual ports to be configured for different media types The interface card must be connected to the hub or switch port with the appropriate FC cabling for the media type in use on both the interface card and the port to which it is connected The interface card supports various Fibre Channel media types through the use of external Small Form Factor Pluggable Transceivers SFPs Suppor
69. ed to the interface card s Ethernet port before selecting this option Select 2 to perform a loopback test of the Fibre Channel connection on the interface card unit For the test to be performed correctly a Fibre Channel loopback connector must be attached to the interface card s Fibre Channel port before selecting this option Selecting X exit from System Diagnostics Mode has a confirmation message to verify the selection If Y yes is given to the confirmation message the interface card restarts itself and enters normal operation mode The power up messages appear followed by the main menu EY NOTE When exiting System Diagnostics Mode remove any diagnostics cables before restarting the unit e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 85 Special FC link control When this option is selected from the System Utilities menu the Special Fibre Channel Link Control menu is displayed Figure 73 Special FC Link states menu Special FC Link Control X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 15 05 45 Current FC Port 0 Non Participating Mode Off LRC Bit in TL Status Reg Reset 1 Set FC Link to Non Participating Mode 2 Set FC LRC Mode Active bit 1 3 Set FC LRC Mode Inactive bit 0 4 Reset TL 5 Display TL Regs X Return to previous menu Command lt enter gt for next Port gt The settings provided on the Special FC Link states menu should onl
70. edia 1 2 0 TAPE UP 160 U160 120 WDE 0x02 0 1 HP SDLT600 2323 us SCSI Bus 1 VIRTUAL DEVICES gt Type State MapCntLUNID Device Description Serial No CTLR uP 1 0 HP NS E1200 320 To perform a manual discovery 1 Select the Fibre Channel port or SCSI bus from the menu bar or the interface card image 44 Visual manager user interface 2 Select Go Figure 28 Perform discovery on FC Port O screen E i HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Perform Discovery on FC Port 0 MAIN MENU FC PORT 0 DISCOVERY Home System No devices were discovered on FC port O Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot DISCOVERY MENU FC Poto SCSI Bus 0 SCSI Bus 1 Figure 29 Perform discovery on SCSI Bus O screen AS De Ej gt AA HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Perform Discovery on SCSI Bus 0 MAIN MENU SCSI BUS 0 DISCOVERY Home System Bus Tgt Lun Type Status Xrate Speed Offset Width Flags IDP Maps Device Descriptio Ports 0 0 0 CHGR UP 20 15 WIDE 0x00 0 1 HP MSL6000 Serie Discovery 0 1 0 TAPE UP 160 U16560 120 WIDE 0x02 0 1 HP SDLT600 2323 Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot DISCOVERY MENU FC Porto SCSI Bus 0 SCSI Bus 1 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 45 Mapping menu Accessed from the Main menu
71. er it s on a private or public loop If Auto Sense Hard AL_PA is selected a unique one byte valid value derived from an Arbitrated Loop Topology as defined in ANSI specification FC_AL 4 5 is used for the Fibre Channel configuration When configuring the Fibre Channel AL_PA the interface card presents a list of loop addresses along with the corresponding AL_PA From here the user can select the loop address desired Select 4 to set the Hard AL_PA Value by entering a node number from the AL_PA lookup table that appears when this option is selected For more information see Arbitrated Loop Node number to AL_PA lookup table on page 114 in Addressing structures and operations on page 113 Select 5 to toggle the Discovery Mode among the following options Auto Discovery on Reboot Events Auto Discovery on Link Up Events Manual Discovery Only IMPORTANT HP recommends that you only use the Manual Discovery Only setting Discovery Mode determines how the interface card discovers a new FC devices Auto Discovery allows the interface card to automatically discover all Fibre Channel devices when the interface card reboots e Reboot Events discovers both the ports and the devices behind the ports Link up Events discovers both the ports and the devices behind the ports for the first link up event which is the first reboot of the interface card Subsequent link up events only discover the ports and not the device
72. er countries Microsoft Windows Windows NT and Windows XP are U S registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation Oracle is a registered U S trademark of Oracle Corporation Redwood City California UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide Contents do AA bok EAE Ann A 7 Infended audience nos die aia Gov ai ks wa eine de annie a alh ees Gace Sua asin caian 7 Related documentation 7 Document conventions and symbols 4 ci 040 i be aed esas bee a ended eo da Ree Re RO DRE Ep Ee RS 7 HP technical AM 8 HP cuthorized resellers io o ary heated aa a aac AEs Ge wah Sata Uo dake apd HUA es 8 Helpful o y seieren hk ete AI A 8 MN AAA ak Geb wpe aoa aver ede aes 9 Operation indicators as BAO ada race 10 How the HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card works 0 0 ee eee eee 11 Procesi n 11 HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card features ooon nauau a 11 Fibre Channel features 11 SCSI bus features 1 Management ss ci Aka de andes ONES EAP eR TRE RDS DACA EA SWR RO RRREK ORY 1 External indicators 4 lt occ eo wale a us 12 Operating Environment 12 Non operating environment i e for unit storage 6 nananana 12 HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card benefits 0 0 0 0 000 eee eee eens 12 2 Installation cabling and selip ARANA AAA 13 Installing the HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card nonono anane 13 Identifying product components onas
73. er is not enabled If a valid Ethernet IP address is configured serial configuration settings can also be set via telnet Login problems In a switched fabric environment if a login problem is experienced or if the drives can not be seen confirm that the port settings of the interface card are set for auto sense or for N port Using a hard ALPA setting with the N port setting is not a valid configuration Windows driver There are no actual device drivers required for the interface card When Windows prompts for a device driver this situation occurs because the Active Fabric LUN of the interface card is enabled Solutions to this request for a driver include the following options Disable Active Fabric or the target LUN for the interface card in order to eliminate further Windows driver requests You can also accept the Windows prompts and disable the device in the device manager Optionally an HP device driver installation file called an INF file is included on the User Documentation CD The interface card does not really need an actual driver as the HBA in the host PC manages this However the included INF file does allow the Windows Device Manager to register the interface card s interface card LUN as a system device Thereafter the Device Manager will no longer consider this interface card LUN to be an unknown or newly discovered device every time there is a reboot By using the included INF file the user just needs to ident
74. erface on page 57 There is also an FTP Utility available within Visual Manager VM that is described in FTP utility access on page 50 Inband SCSI 3 commands The interface card supports a set of SCSI 3 commands that can be received as FCP commands over the Fibre Channel ports When using these commands they must be sent to a tape LUN or interface card LUN of the interface card For more information see Inband SCS 3 commands on page 109 and HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card features on page 11 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 29 30 Interface card management 5 Visual manager user interface The HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card allows any standard Internet Web browser to view and change the interface card s configuration with the Visual Manager interface Information is dynamically generated in an HTML format by the interface card so that Web browsers can access it To access Visual Manager enter the IP address of the interface card into the address field of a Web browser Or enter a URL using a host name defined by the user for instance http HP e1200 3204GbFCInterfaceCard But the user must define the host name on the DNS server first for this to work To make changes to interface card settings use standard keyboard and mouse controls to input information and then select the Submit button to send the changes to the interface card A user name and password are req
75. ers Helpful web sites For other product information see the following HP web sites http www hp com htto www hp com go storage http www hp com support e htto www docs hp com Introduction The HP StorageWorks el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card provides bi directional connectivity between one Fibre Channel Switched Fabric FC SW or Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop FC AL and two Narrow Wide Fast Ultra320 IVD SE SCSI buses Supported devices include e Initiator Devices Fibre Channel hosts Target Devices Tape drives Figure shows the layout of the HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Figure 1 HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card ports L Isos an 0 oH ii 93 00 AN71 19w OOL OL TWIy3S Table 2 HP e1 200 320 4Gb Interface Card Description Reset access hole Serial management port 10 100 Ethernet management port Fibre Channel network port Two SCSI busses In addition to Fibre Channel and SCSI interfaces there are Ethernet and serial ports that provide connectivity for configuration and management access The LEDs operation indicators provide basic status information A reset button is also provided for a manually forced reboot of the interface card e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 9 Operation indicators The HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card has LED indicators for monitoring overall status as show
76. es the interface card enters System Diagnostics Mode This option is described in more detail later in this chapter Select 5 to access a special diagnostic utility This utility should not be used unless under the guidance of an authorized HP technician Select 6 to display the SCSI Command Tracking menu described later in this chapter e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 79 System statistics menu Figure 64 System status statistics menu System Status Statistics menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Display System Status 2 Display Fibre Channel Protocol Status 3 Display Parallel SCSI Protocol Status X Return to main menu Select 1 from the System Status Statistics menu to display system status Figure 65 System status menu System Status Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Display memory statistics 2 Display active tasks 3 Display stack usage 4 Display SCSI Protocol Resources X Return to previous menu Select 1 to display memory statistics e Select 2 to display active tasks Select 3 to display stack usage Select 4 to display SCSI Protocol Resources Select 2 from the System Status Statistics menu to display Fibre Channel Protocol Status 80 Using the Command Line Interface Select 1 from the Fibre Channel Status menu to display Fibre Channel Link Status Figu
77. es from the Fibre Channel Configuration Menu setting the AL_PA value on the interface card The user enters the node number number to the left of the colon from Table 21 and the interface card translates the node number into the corresponding AL_PA value number to the right of the colon in Table 21 Auto Assigned addressing option The Auto Assigned option is similar to the Indexed addressing but with the distinction that the table used is created through SCSI device discovery on power up or reset and not otherwise retained As the unit performs device discovery on the SCSI bus the Index table FCP LUN values are filled with adjacent FCP LUNs referencing each subsequent SCSI device The host system will then detect every attached SCSI device without voids allowing full device discovery to the host This allows easy configuration in environments where SCSI device ordering is not important and where hot plugging of SCSI devices will not occur Configuration options provide for the SCSI discovery to be performed in order of bus target or LUN as desired for the specific environment 114 Addressing structures and operations Indexed addressing option Indexed Addressing allows for host bus adapter HBA drivers that only use Peripheral Device addressing to access SCSI devices attached to the interface card This is done by use of a table which is indexed by sequential LUN values indicating selected BUS TARGET LUN devices It is not possible
78. eshooting the HP StorageWorks e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Intended audience This guide is intended for general users who need physical and functional knowledge of the HP StorageWorks e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Related documentation In addition to this guide the following document is available for this product HP StorageWorks e 1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Installation poster This and other HP documents can be found on the HP documents web site http www hp com support manuals Document conventions and symbols Table 1 Document conventions Convention Element Medium blue text Figure 1 Cross reference links and e mail addresses Medium blue underlined text Web site addresses http www hp com Bold font Key names Text typed into a GUI element such as into a box GUI elements that are clicked or selected such as menu and list items buttons and check boxes Italics font Text emphasis Monospace font gt File and directory names System output Code gt Text typed at the command line Monospace italic font Code variables Command line variables Monospace bold font Emphasis of file and directory names system output code and text typed at the command line A WARNING Indicates that failure to follow directions could result in bodily harm or death A CAUTION Indicates that failure to follow directions could result in damage to equipment or data
79. evice Details X Return to previous menu Command lt enter gt for next FC Port gt r Port 0 Requesting discovery Doing device discovery on port 0 Completed discovery on port 0 Fibre Channel Device Display Version X X XXXX FC Port 0 Port id 0x000001 Port 0 TARGET DEVICE UP Port id 0x000010 HP Ultrium 3 SCSI L22W Type Direct Access R Refresh Device Display D Display Device Details X Return to previous menu Select R to refresh the device display as shown in the menu above with the latest status information and perform manual FC discovery as set in the Fibre Channel Configuration menu described earlier in this chapter Select D to display device details Select 3 to display FC Resource Status Select 4 to display FC Driver Resource Status 82 Using the Command Line Interface Select 5 to display FC SeqCmd_Q Resources Select 6 to display FC SFP Data Select 3 from the System Status Statistics menu to display Parallel SCSI Protocol Status Figure 68 Parallel SCSI protocol status menu Parallel SCSI Protocol Status menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Display SCSI Statistics 2 Display Attached SCSI Devices 3 Display SCSI Resource Status X Return to previous menu e Select 1 to display SCSI statistics Select 2 to display attached SCSI devices Figure 69 SCSI device display menu SCSI De
80. f together with general household waste To forward them to recycling or proper disposal use the public collection system or return them to HP an authorized HP Partner or their agents For more information about battery replacement or proper disposal contact an authorized reseller or an authorized service provider 106 Regulatory compliance and safety Taiwan battery recycling notice ca The Taiwan EPA requires dry battery manufacturing or importing ia firms in accordance with Article 15 of the Waste Disposal Act to wI TENERA E indicate the recovery marks on the batteries used in sales giveaway or promotion Contact a qualified Taiwanese recycler for proper battery disposal e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 107 108 Regulatory compliance and safety C Inband SCSI 3 commands The HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card supports a set of SCSI 3 commands that can be received inband over SCSI NDMP When received by the interface card these commands are then executed by the interface card itself When using SCSI 3 commands to access general management features the commands can be sent to device LUNs that are mapped through the interface card The following is a list of the SCSI 3 commands that are supported by the interface card Complete definitions of SCSI 3 commands can be found in the SCSI 3 standard available from the American National Standards Institute ANSI General Commands REPORT LUN
81. f trace buffer or event log nonan annann tee e eens 90 Updating firmwares ri A ae Hae the Rie Bok HEN Bh Wok HARE He hE 91 A A 93 General troubleshooting is o64bs ana oo as da oia 93 What happens if the DHCP server cannot be contacted n on nananana 93 A A eee ee ee 93 A a a e Bh ek ON Roe a Bohne A E Aa E Eaa E 94 Serial por problems secet da a a DEERE ade paran 94 login problems dt MO ag eco ee ge NE OM We a aA ag GDN age RSI IR OR SE A 94 Windows ONE 4 4 coea Fa AGO aa ORD EES RS SHRED Bs EA aa ES 94 Verify SCSI bus configuration xx ula 4 6 x eng 8 WR eee week a Ma en a Him A 95 Verity Fibre Channel connection espias iio dae wees dows 95 Verify SCSI devices in Windows NT ci 0 a NR RR RAR Ae 95 Verify configuration ula E A A AR CAS 96 ML A A RRS eR BA SR AG a A a ee 96 Verify A doe Sah Sass So ae DS So oe GR SS EAE E 96 Verify host configuration gx si hn 4 cece nog ae Wr kc ack Meee ari Gr BT A hgcI 96 o ccs a deent eat Sint ee eee ane lee ects weeds ep aoe ca ate tates ce ek anaes Ale ee aoe ee 96 Verity HBA device driver information ria ed wenn Ov Poe POR OH ES RR MG Ed oR Oe ES 97 Running CIOQHORIES i 4453 kao cade AA dA Eee cas 97 Technical Suppor sie ace Gd eh ER Move GAG Gaye he GR AMHR ACRE DR 97 HP technical support ssi Kok Scab ad gee Sw ed AACR ae ears a eg RS Sa 97 A Serial and Enemel pin assignmEnS sss cc dudaw ddd now edu caasdenaaehensa es 99 ll piniassignmenis a a da 99 DB 9 pin assignments o 100 RJ 45 Ethernet P
82. face card to router device differential domain exchange fabric FC A printed circuit assembly that translates data between the FC host processor s internal bus and a different bus such as SCSI See SCSI addressing Used to create a mapping table that maps devices on the SCSI bus to Fibre Channel logical units Arbitrated Loop Physical Address A unique one byte valid value derived and used in an Arbitrated Loop Topology as defined in ANSI specification FC_AL ver 4 5 See Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop ANSI specification FC_AL ver 4 5 The second byte of the N_Port Identifier A menu item The auto addressing option creates a mapping table using devices discovered upon powering up or resetting the interface card that is not otherwise retained by the interface card A unit of signaling speed expressed as the maximum number of times per second the signal can change the state of the transmission line or other medium units of baud are sec Note With Fibre Channel scheme a signal event represents a single transmission bit A means of transferring data between modules and adapters or between an adapter and SCSI devices For a SCSI bus definition see SCSI bus A general term for a path on which electronic signals travel Two or more computers sharing the same resources on a communication link An intelligent device within the SAN storage area network infrastructure that can handle multiple protocols such as Fi
83. fault setting for each port can be set to Auto assigned Indexed or SCC which applies to the FC port only by the user e1 200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 25 26 Device management 4 Interface card management The HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card can be managed over the following user interfaces Over the serial port via a terminal or a terminal emulation utility Over Ethernet via a Telnet utility or an HTTP based interface called Visual Manager Additionally FTP support provides additional management functionality Before attempting to configure the interface card a basic understanding of Fibre Channel and SCSI devices is recommended EY NOTE For information on SCSI standards refer to publications from the X3T10 committee of ANSI American National Standards Institute For information on Fibre Channel standards refer to publications from the X3T11 committee of ANSI For those who are interested in purchasing approved American National Standards and Technical Reports you can contact ANSI at 212 642 4900 Configuration methods The interface card can be configured over the serial port via a terminal or terminal emulation utility over Ethernet via a Telnet utility or Web browser FTP is also supported on Ethernet to update firmware revisions Serial port management access The serial port allows for configuration of device characteristics from an attached terminal or terminal emu
84. figuration and SCSI configuration sections in Interface card management on page 27 and Discovery menu on page 44 Host bus adapter configuration A host system using a Fibre Channel Host Bus Adapter HBA typically maps devices into the existing device mapping scheme used by the host operating system Refer to the HBA manual for the mapping table Mapping usually involves pairing FC AL_PAs to SCSI target addresses The HBA claims enough SCSI bus entries to allow for 125 FC targets to map to SCSI bus Target entries This is usually done by a fixed mapping of AL_PA to Bus Target In such a configuration the interface card corresponds to a Bus Target identifier with the SCSI devices attached to the interface card appearing as logical units LUNs Operating systems can extend the available SCSI limit of 15 targets per bus Although this is not an issue for the operating system or most applications there are cases where older applications can have expectations about what are valid SCSI IDs and not correctly handle certain mappings In particular applications have been seen to exhibit difficulties addressing target IDs greater than 15 e g 16 and up This problem can be resolved by configuring the interface card to use hard addressing and setting the AL_PA used by the unit to a value that the HBA will map to an ID with a value less than 16 For example depending on the FC HBA if the hard AL_PA selection is 1 the interface card address
85. formation related to the processing of specific SCSI commands SCSI Command Tracking can be toggled to ON or OFF When toggled ON and submitted all SCSI commands received or transmitted to or from the interface card are then logged in the SCSI Commands section shown on this screen When set to OFF and submitted no SCSI commands are logged Previous entries for SCSI Command Tracking can also be cleared Toggling the clear option to the ON position and selecting the Submit button clears all previous entries The settings for the Host Device ID Table are used to filter the trace data such that a sub set of the total logged information is displayed under the SCSI Commands section Logged data can be defined according to the Protocol FC Other or ALL Type Device Host or ALL and Value ID or ALL For the ID this can be a specific FC LUN or Switch ID S_ID or some other specific value Selecting the Submit button activates the settings for Protocol Type and Value Report menu Accessed from the Main menu when Report is selected a second window pops up and displays a consolidated view of the following Platform BIOS Initialization Bootup Initialization Serial Ethernet FC Port O SFP Transceiver in FC Port O SCSI Bus O SCSI Bus 1 Discovery Information Device Entries Mapping Information Active Initiators Trace Settings Current Traces Previous Traces Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log e1200 320
86. g is recommended for FC Arbitrated Loop environments where it is important that the FC device addresses do not change Device address changes can affect the mapping represented by the host operating system to the application and have adverse effects An example of this would be a tape library installation where the application configuration requires fixed device identification for proper operation Hard addressing ensures that the device identification to the application remains constant FC switched fabric addressing When connected to a Fibre Channel switch the interface card is identified to the switch as a unique device by the factory programmed World Wide Name WWN and the World Wide Port Names WWPN which are derived from the WWN e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 23 Discovery Discovery is a feature that makes it easy to display attached FC and SCSI target devices and have them mapped automatically on the host side for the connected bus port There are two discovery methods available Manual Discovery and Auto Discovery Auto Discovery can be set to occur after either reboot events when the card reboots or link up events for instance when cables are attached or a hub is rebooted Discovery can also be turned off by setting the interface card to Manual Discovery Only The default setting for FC Discovery is Manual Discovery For specific information on Discovery settings see the Fibre Channel con
87. ge configuration settings you may click on ports and buses MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot Vendor Product Firmware Level Bios Version Booter Version CPU PLD Version PartSerial HW ID BIOS INITIALIZATION Platform ID Initialization Memory Test Initialization Calendar Power Initialization Calendar Initialization Indicator Initialization Resource List Initialization SCSI Configuration BOOTUP INITIALIZATION SCSI Port 0 Script RAM SCSI Port 1 Script RAM SCSI Port 0 POST SCSI Port 1 POST FC Port 0 POST Ethernet POST Test Home page information includes The HP logo is located in the upper left corner of the Home page see Figure 15 If the Internet is accessible to the host click the HP logo to open the web site An illustration of the interface card is located near the top of the home page Figure 16 is an example HP StorageWorks e1200 320 4G Interface Controller 5 7 18 BIOS 20 08 00 00 BOOTER 20 07 00 00 0x6 AD95162020503948 A02GMG PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED of this portion of the home page screen Figure 16 Interface card image The interface card image is interactive allowing quick access to configuration menus To display current settings and status for a port click the corresponding port shown in the interface card image To open a menu for making changes to the configuration for that particula
88. ggle Change Return Ethernet Physical Address Ethernet Mode Hostname DHCP Configuration IP Address IP Subnet Mask IP Gateway Ethernet Physical Address Ethernet Mode Hostname DHCP Configuration Security Settings to previous menu 192 168 60 203 DHCP 2 255 255 255 0 192 168 60 1 00 E0 02 E3 17 51 10 100Mbps Auto Neg interface card Enabled Select 1 to change the IP address of the interface card Select 2 to change the IP subnet mask for the interface card Select 3 to change the IP gateway for the Ethernet network of the interface card Select 4 to change the Ethernet physical address or MAC address of the interface card Since Ethernet physical addresses are always assigned to Ethernet adapters by the manufacturers HP recommends that this setting not be changed Select 5 to toggle the Ethernet mode among the following options Select 6 to change the host name This is an alphanumeric entry of one word up to 8 characters long 10Mps Only 100Mps half duplex Only 100Mps full duplex Only 10 100Mps Auto Neg Default Ef NOTE Do not use a capital Z as a part of the host name because this is the autobaud hot key used by the MS Windows terminal utility for serial connections 60 Using the Command Line Interface Select 7 to toggle the DHCP setting This setting enables disables support for Dynamic Configuration Pro
89. his setting provides support for transfer rates of up to 320 Megabytes per second This is the default setting Select 2 to set the maximum SCSI bus speed to Fast 160 This setting provides support for transfer rates of up to 160 Megabytes per second Select 3 to set the maximum SCSI bus speed to Ultra 2 This setting provides support for transfer rates of up to 80 Megabytes per second Select X to return to the Target ID selection prompt where a different Target ID can be selected e1 200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 67 Device mapping 68 This option allows the user to manipulate maps and associate selected host with a particular map Each physical port bus on the system has at least an Indexed map and Auto Assigned map In addition there is a SCC Map and a Port O Device Map on FCP ports Each map has a unique name and map ID You can rename all maps except for Indexed Auto Assigned and SCC The map that is set to be current must always contain valid information since many of the operations on the map menu are executed against this map Figure 48 Device mapping main menu Device Mapping Main Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXKXXK 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Default Map for FCP Port 0 Indexed 1 Select Current Map 2 Display Current Map 3 Create New Map 4 Remove Current Map 5 Edit Current Map 6 Clone Current Map 7 Edit Host List for Current Map 8 Display Device
90. ic environments Select A from the Fibre Channel Configuration menu to toggle the port speed between 1 2 and 4 Gb s for the selected FC port 64 Using the Command Line Interface Parallel SCSI configuration This menu allows for setting up SCSI attributes Figure 45 Parallel SCSI configuration menu Parallel SCSI Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current SCSI Configuration Bus 0 Discovery Enabled Bus Reset on Boot Enabled Discovery delay time 30 seconds Internal Termination Enabled 1 Edit Initiator Settings 2 Enable Disable SCSI Discovery 3 Enable Disable SCSI Reset on Boot 4 Set Discovery Delay Time 5 Set SCSI Termination Mode 6 Set Maximum SCSI Bus Connect Speed X Return to previous menu Command lt enter gt for next bus gt Press the Enter key to toggle the current menu to the next SCSI bus Select 1 to edit the SCSI Initiator menu settings described later in the chapter Select 2 to enable disable SCSI Discovery Select 3 to enable disable SCSI bus Reset on Boot When enabled the interface card automatically resets SCSI buses after initial library power up and after reboots Select 4 to set the discovery delay time for SCSI devices The default is 30 seconds This is the time the interface card waits after a power up or reboot before starting to discover SCSI devices This value should be set to no less than 250ms acco
91. ies from the current map The user is prompted for confirmation Select 4 from the Map Edit menu to fill the current map This selection scans the device list and appends all unmapped devices at the end of the current map Devices marked as DOWN are not mapped After this operation completes the Edit Map Entries screen appears Select 6 from the Device Mapping Main menu to clone current map This option allows the user to make an exact copy of an already existing map complete with all entries Cloning of Auto Assigned or SCC Map is not allowed The new map must have a unique map ID and name Once cloning is complete the newly created map becomes current map The purpose of this option is to create a base for a new map that is similar to an already existing map Select 7 from the Device Mapping Main menu to edit the host list for the current map The current map can be associated with hosts available in the host list on the same port where the map is defined Initially all hosts are associated with an Indexed map These are built at runtime hosts They cannot be edited or deleted their name cannot be changed e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 71 The following is an example of a host list for FCP hosts Figure 52 Host list for FCP hosts Host List Edit Display X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Map FCP Port 0 Name Indexed FCP Port 0 Host List 1 Hi 0
92. ify the interface card to the Windows Device Manager only once To install or register the interface card to a connected host Windows PC perform the following steps 1 Copy the INF file to the Windows PC which has the FC HBA to be connected to the interface card Typically the appropriate location to copy the file is as follows C WINNT system32 EY NOTE There must be an interface card LUN set up on the interface card so that the Windows operating system can discover it 2 When the interface card FC Link LED indicates a good connection the user can either reboot the PC or run the Windows Device Manager Scan for New Hardware function Either action should result in the HBA issuing a SCSI Inquiry command to which the interface card replies with an ASCII Inquiry string NOTE Initially the Windows Hardware Wizard uses this string to refer to the interface card After this discovery interaction occurs the Hardware Wizard will prompt the user to install a device driver 94 Troubleshooting 3 Select the Wizard s Search for Better Driver option and specify the folder containing the interface card INF file The Hardware Wizard will scan the specified folder for all INF files and will select the first INF file it finds with a device entry containing a matching hardware ID string Ef NOTE The Hardware Wizard will copy the selected INF file renaming it to OEM lt H gt inf where the is some integer and it will
93. ill typically do initial device discovery using the Peripheral Device addressing method On issuing an INQUIRY command to the interface card the host will receive the interface card Inquiry data indicating the device type as a interface card device Inquiry data indicates device type is OxC The host will then know on this basis that subsequent commands to interface card attached devices will use the Logical Unit addressing method The host can perform discovery by either walking through the BUS TARGET LUN values as would a standard SCSI driver or by issuing a REPORT LUNS command This command is sent to the interface card using the Peripheral Device addressing method and the interface card returns a table indicating e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 115 attached devices The host can then perform actions on these interface card attached devices directly without having to perform discovery by issuing commands through all possible combinations 116 Addressing structures and operations Enabling DHCP on the HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card DHCP or Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol is an open industry standard that simplifies administering networks based on Transmission Control Protocol Internet Protocol TCP IP DHCP allows network resources to go farther by enabling a unique IP address to be assigned to a specific device interface card client host etc on a non permanent dynamic basis D
94. in Assignments 000000 id AGARRAR A Hea GUA GD 101 B Regulatory compliance ond safely ir eee wus 103 Reg latory compliance s sas idad dae HG SRE tae Wee Ak DM dale wg ae a eben ER ah GR ng whe hi 103 Federal Communications Commission notice 0 0 teenies 103 Emissions classification Class As io idee ead dd tada ee dc cd de va 103 a O cacao phes 103 Class Be ME daa a lea din aid bola deh ae WHEE 103 Declaration of conformity for products marked with the FCC logo United States only 104 Modifications eit ay dd iria Se lp io cant il nan BS eh dd mdd 104 A 6222 ee8 cave pecan nude ded a dea e tute Rese e nee 104 laser Device 46d ick uae IO II i Ee aE De EE E 104 Laser safety WOMAN ae Ae qe aoa ae 104 International notices and statements lt 4 2 424 cr id burned we een we 105 Canadian notice avis Canadien 0 eee eee eee ee 105 A aN aE ae AND 0 A Se ee ae Oh ah WHEE 105 Class B equipment 1c n on 65 oa ed aan eee ERO bee ea eee eed awh 105 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 5 European Union Notice o o oooooooooo nn eee ee eee eee 105 BSMI notice siis dele eared a bandon te aac Aid as Aas te Aa he een E e eai a ib the wad ta a ed Dele ed on T 105 Japanese NONE ea ts eth aa NAS a a ADA vas Mawes AA weedy datas Bs 106 Korean notices aia EL ARAL A PL EGS OLE kOe CHEE Ree hee Rede we 106 oll ee See eee ee ee eer eee eS ee ee E Tey Te ree ee ee eT ee ee eee 106 Battery statements ci a
95. in this mode to address the interface card as an interface card unit directly The table has the structure as shown in Table 22 The maximum size of the table is equal to the number of buses times the number of targets per bus less one initiator ID per bus times the number of LUNs per target The index table can be manually edited A method is also provided to perform SCSI device discovery and fill the table in the order that SCSI devices are discovered on the SCSI buses Table 22 Indexed addressing table FCP LUN Value SCSI BUS TARGET LUN 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 4 0 0 5 0 0 6 0 0 7 0 occupied by Initiator ID 0 8 0 0 14 0 0 15 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 22 SCC addressing option When an interface card device is configured to use SCSI interface card Commands SCC addressing the unit is capable of responding as an interface card device to the FCP Initiator or routing the FCP request to a specified BUS TARGET LUN When a request using the Peripheral Device addressing method is received an FCP command with the LUN field with bits 7 and 6 of byte O are set to 0 the unit routes the request to the internal processor which acts on the command directly When a request using the Logical Unit addressing method is received bits 7 and 6 set to 10b the request is routed to the BUS TARGET LUN as specified in the defined field Host systems using SCC addressing w
96. ings configures trace settings Current Traces displays current trace information Previous Traces displays previous trace information Last Assert Traces displays last assert trace information Clear Current Traces clears current trace information Clear Assert Traces clear current trace information Event Log Settings configures Event Log settings Event Log displays the Event Log Clear Event Log clears the Event Log SCSI Command Tracking Each Utilities menu option is discussed in the following sections e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide Accessed from the Main menu the Utilities menu is used to view and configure utility options see Figure 32 Figure 32 Utilities menu PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED PASSED 49 FTP utility access The FTP utility screen is used to open an FTP session see Figure 33 Figure 33 FTP Utility screen CA invent A MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot UTILITIES MENU FTP Utility Trace Settings Current Traces Previous Traces Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking Y HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses 1 Fill User Name Password and Router IP Address fields
97. ion 96 devices 96 Fibre Channel 95 HBA 97 host 96 PRLI 96 login 94 mapping 96 SCSI 95 SCSI Win NT 95 serial 94 Windows 94 DHOP server 93 indicators 93 U user configuration Visual Manager 38 utilities configuration Visual Manager 49 V Visual Manager accessing 31 Active Fabric configuration number of controller LUNs 37 options 37 baud rate configuration 35 Clear Current Trace Buffer screen illustrated 52 clock configuration 39 Current traces screen illustrated 52 discovery 44 Discovery screen illustrated 44 Ethernet configuration DHCP 36 IP address 36 IP gateway 36 subnet mask 36 event log clearing 54 configuration 52 display 53 Event Log settings screen illustrated 52 Fibre Channel buffered tape writes 43 configuration of 42 default map 43 discovery mode 42 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 131 hard AL_PA 42 link status 42 performance mode 43 port mode 42 Fibre Channel hosts viewing and changing 47 FTP access 50 FTP Utility screen illustrated 50 home page 33 Home page illustrated 33 I O configuration 41 IC image illustrated 33 main menu 33 main menu illustrated 33 mapping tasks Fibre Channel viewing and changing 47 network configuration 36 Network Menu options 36 Network screen illustrated 36 Ports menu illustrated 41 reboot option 56 Reboot screen illustrated 56 report options 55 Report screen illustrated 55 Reset to Factory Default screen illustra
98. ipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions may cause harmful interference to radio communications However there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures e Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna e Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit that is different from that to which the receiver is connected Consult the dealer or an experienced radio or television technician for help e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 103 Declaration of conformity for products marked with the FCC logo United States only This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules Operation is subject to the following two conditions 1 this device may not cause harmful interference and 2 this device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operation For questions regarding your product visit http www hp com For questions regarding this FCC declaration contact us by mail or telephone e Hewlett Packard Company P O Box 692000 Mailstop 510101
99. is 1 If the selection is 125 the interface card address is OxEF Some FC HBAs configure differently so verify the AL_PA by reviewing the documentation for the HBA Logical unit management Because SAN resources can be shared multiple hosts can have access to the same devices on the SAN To prevent conflicts the interface card provides the means to restrict access and only allow hosts to find and access selected devices Simple LUN masking can restrict access but many times this leaves gaps in the list of LUNs presented to a host since devices are always associated with fixed LUNs The interface card however provides controlled access to devices by use of LUN management which goes beyond simple LUN masking LUN Management is the ability to present different hosts with different views of the devices accessed through the interface card For example one FC host may see three disk LUNs and a tape LUN at LUNs 0 to 3 when it performs discovery on the interface card Another FC host may only discover a tape LUN at LUN O Not only can the administrator control which devices a host may access but also which LUNs are used to access these devices LUN Management is accomplished by allowing the administrator to configure multiple maps each of which may present a different view of the devices behind the interface card Each host accessing the interface card can be associated with a specific map For a host connected to an FC port a map is a table of
100. is the number of P_BSY frames transmitted by this port InF_BSYFrames is the number of F_BSY frames received by this port InP_RJTFrames is the number of P_RJT frames received by this port OutP_RJTFrame is the number of P_RJT frames transmitted by this port LinkDowns is the number of link down conditions detected InABTSs is the number of ABTS frames received OutABTSs is the number of ABTS frames transmitted LaserFaults is the number of laser faults detected SignalLosses is the number of times loss of signal was detected e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 81 Table 7 Fibre Channel status SyncLosses is the number of times loss of sync was detected BadRxChars is the number of bad characters received LinkFailures is the number of link failure conditions BadCRCFrames is the number of frames received with a bad CRC ProtocolErrs is the number of protocol errors detected BadSCSIFrames is the number of bad SCSI frames detected UnderflowErrs is the number of underflow errors detected Select A to have the status information repeatedly refreshed Select 2 from the Fibre Channel Status menu to display Attached Fibre Channel Devices Figure 67 Fibre Channel device display Fibre Channel Device Display X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 FC Port 0 Port id 0x000001 R Refresh Device Display D Display D
101. itrated loop including point to point configurations or switched fabric topologies SCSI buses automatically negotiate for Fast Narrow Wide and up to Ultra320 SCSI 12 Introduction 2 Installation cabling and setup This chapter describes installing cabling and setup for the HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card Ef NOTE Read this chapter carefully and completely before working with the interface card Installing the HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card Before you begin clear a work surface near the library to unpack the interface card Keep the card in the static sensitive bag until you are ready to install it Identifying product components The interface card kit e HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card e Documentation bundle e Documentation CD e Installation poster Safety CD e Warranty guide e HP product documentation survey Serial cable Two SCSI cables 0 5 m VHDCI VHDCI e Installation poster e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 13 Removal and installation NOTE To avoid damage to the library ensure cards are installed in the correct option slots If you are installing one card place it in the middle slot next to the controller board If you are installing two cards in a 10U library place the second card in the center slot on the bottom level of the library Before removing an existing card or installing a new card do the following 1 Using the library front panel GUI
102. k SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT For time it is not necessary to enter the seconds that is hh mm is an acceptable format For the date the month and day can be entered as single digits for instance 6 instead of 06 Active fabric configuration When this option is selected from the Perform Configuration menu from the Main menu the Active Fabric menu appears NOTE An Active Fabric Controller LUN is needed when using Library amp Tape Tools to upgrade the interface card firmware and to generate support tickets Figure 62 Active fabric configuration menu Active Fabric Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Active Fabric Configuration Server Free Backup Mode DISABLED Number of interface card LUNS 0 4 1 interface card LUNS in auto assigned map go last 1 Change number of interface card LUNs 2 Change location of luns in auto assigned map X Return to previous menu 78 Using the Command Line Interface Select 1 to change the number of interface card LUNs reported by the interface card This value can be set to a number in the range of 0 to 4 Select 2 to change the location of LUNs in an auto assigned map LUNs can be positioned starting at the beginning first location or at the end last location of the map For more information on interface card LUNs see Inband SCSI 3 commands on page 109 Save configuration This o
103. lable see Interface card management on page 27 Backup restore configuration settings The interface card supports backup and restore of configuration settings over FTP This allows users to maintain multiple setting configurations externally from the interface card and to be able to restore any of the configurations as needed When backing up configurations are saved from flash to a binary file Configuration backup procedure 1 Connect the interface card to the Ethernet network used by your computer 2 Start your FTP program using the interface card s IP address ftp lt IP address gt IMPORTANT The network settings set to use DHCP need to be set to default If the IP address is not known use the serial interface to obtain the network settings See Setting up serial port communications on page 22 EY NOTE You may also need to specify the directory location on your computer or network where your FTP program will store the backup file 3 Enter the user name and password The default values for user name and password are root for the user name and password for the password 4 Specify binary mode bin 5 Specify the filename c g file with the get command get filename cfg where fi lename cfg can be any name for the configuration file The file will transfer to the current directory specified on your computer s FTP utility If running FTP from a DOS or Linux command line the destination director
104. lator EY NOTE A Serial connection cannot be made if a Telnet session discussed later is already open If a user attempts to open a serial connection while a Telnet session is already open the following message appears over the serial interface System in use via Telnet Shell restarted The serial interface resumes working when the Telnet session closes Out of band Ethernet management access DHCP is enabled by default and the default network settings that are currently shown are only the values that are pre loaded if you disable DHCP The first time you use the interface card use the serial interface to identify the network settings that were assigned from the DHCP server or to set a new static setting When DHCP is disabled the pre filled in values are IP address 1 1 1 1 a subnet mask of 255 255 255 0 and a gateway address of 0 0 0 0 HP recommends that at a minimum the IP address should be changed CAUTION HP strongly recommends not having two interface cards using the pre filled in static IP address on the same network as this causes a conflict When setting the IP address for the interface card there are two options The first option is to enter a fixed or permanent IP address for the interface card The second option is to enable DHCP on the interface card so that a DHCP server on the Ethernet network used by the interface card can assign a dynamic IP address to the interface card Your DHCP
105. lator utility Select the location of the firmware Use the Browse button if you need help finding it The download transfer protocol should use 1K XMODEM if the terminal emulator supports it Otherwise use just XMODEM as the transfer protocol Press the Send button The firmware begins to download to the interface card When the download process is complete the system verifies that the firmware image was successfully written to the FLASH memory and then reboots the interface card Upon reboot the interface card detects that there is a newly downloaded firmware image copies that image to the boot sector of the FLASH and then boots with that image At that point the interface card is using the new firmware The following figure shows what you could see on your terminal when you download a new revision of the firmware Figure 76 Trace dump menu Download Firmware Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 This replaces the current revision of the firmware A reboot is also performed as part of this process Are you sure y n Y Please begin symptom file transfer SS SSSSSES DOWNLOAD COMPLETE KEKKKKKKEKKKKKEKKKKRKKKKEKKKKKKKKKEKKKKK Start System Cold Reboot 88 Using the Command Line Interface 7 Using the FTP interface This chapter describes specific management options available from the FTP interface For an overview of using the other management interfaces avai
106. lection If a response of Yes is given the unit clears the current trace buffer Current interface card activities are not disrupted while the buffer is cleared Select the Submit button to finalize your choice Event log settings The Event Log Settings screen is used to configure Event Log filters see Figure 35 Figure 35 Event Log Settings screen A 7 13 20 SS 2 o i 3 zk cet ae O HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Event Log Filter Configuration MAIN MENU Disable Event Logging Warning Events Home Emergency Events Notify Events System Ports Alert Events O Info Events Discovery Critical Events Debug Events Mapping Statistics Error Events Oo Log All Events Utilities Reboot UTILITIES MENU FTP Utility Trace Settinas Current Traces Previous Traces Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking Event Log settings Disable Enable Logging Emergency Events Alert Events Critical Events Error Events 52 Visual manager user interface Warning Events Notify Events e Info Events Debug Events e Log All Events Event logging captures the last 215 events and then starts overwriting the log NOTE To correlate event logging correctly set the clock and date in the Real Time Clock configuration
107. llows for various operations to be pertormed on the interface card e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 57 Select 1 to access interface card configuration settings Select 2 to access System Utilities Select 3 to display trace and assertion history Select 4 to reboot the interface card A confirmation message appears to verify this action Enter N to return to the System Utilities menu Enter Y to restart the interface card Select 5 to download a new revision of the firmware A confirmation message appears to verify this action For additional information see Download a new revision of the firmware on page 88 Enter N to return to the Main menu e Enter Y for the interface card to accept firmware data from the serial port Perform configuration The Perform Configuration menu allows the administrator to configure the various options on the interface card For most configuration changes to take effect you must reboot the interface card EY NOTE Menus are not case sensitive You can enter uppercase and lowercase characters interchangeably whenever menus indicate letters as choices Figure 41 Configuration menu Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Baud Rate Configuration 2 Ethernet Configuration 3 Fibre Channel Configuration 4 Parallel SCSI Configuration 5 Device Mapping 6 Trace and Event Settings Configuration
108. ment Once DHCP is enabled it is necessary to save the current configuration and reboot the interface card before DHCP will operate EY NOTE For the IP address Subnet Mask and IP Gateway address it is okay to have null values prior to rebooting the interface card However if these settings have null values after a reboot then this indicates the DHCP Server was unable to acquire the information for that setting See the note below for more information Use the following steps to save the current settings and reboot the system 1 Select X Return to previous menu 2 Select A Save Configuration 3 Select X Return to previous menu 4 Select 4 Reboot After the interface card finishes rebooting the Main Menu will appear DHCP status can be verified from the Ethernet Configuration Menu where DHCP Configuration is indicated as Enabled if DHCP has been successfully activated Note that the IP Address my also appear different than the former non DHCP IP Address e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 119 EY NOTE To use the DHCP feature a DHCP server must be operational on the Ethernet network used by the interface card If the DHCP feature is used when there is no DHCP server the standard for DHCP requires that the interface card wait three minutes for a response from a DHCP server before timing out During this period the interface card menus and functions will not be accessible
109. menu Event log display The Event Log screen is used to view the Event Log see Figure 36 Figure 36 Event log display AAA e oO 03 e 0 O HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot UTILITIES MENU FTP Utility Trace Settings Current Traces Previous Traces Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking Event Log Display Event Log Num Date Time 03 14 2006 08 54 43 03 22 2006 13 24 28 03 22 2006 13 27 01 03 22 2006 13 27 01 03 22 2006 13 27 01 03 22 2006 13 27 01 03 22 2006 13 27 02 03 23 2006 10 45 38 03 23 2006 10 48 11 03 23 2006 10 48 11 03 23 2006 10 48 11 03 23 2006 10 48 11 03 23 2006 10 48 12 03 27 2006 10 08 29 03 27 2006 10 08 30 03 27 2006 10 08 30 03 27 2006 10 09 06 03 27 2006 10 09 06 03 27 2006 10 11 35 03 27 2006 10 11 36 03 29 2006 06 53 34 sysUpTime 0d00h16m13 95s 11d11h20m39 95s Od00h00m00 00s 0d00h00m49 20s Od00h00m49 20s Od00h00m49 26s 0d00h00m50 48s 1d05h49m42 70s Od00h00m00 00s Od00h00m49 20s Od00h00m49 20s 0d00h00m49 25s 0d00h00m50 50s 5d13h29m14 50s 5d13h29m15 155 5d13h29m15 55s 5d13h30m06 26s 5d13h30m06 26s Od00h00m00 00s Od00h00m50 45s Od00h00m00 00s e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide Me
110. mination The other end should have a terminator placed on the SCSI connector on the last SCSI peripheral If this device is not terminated data errors may occur The physical or logical layout of nodes on a network FC topologies include Point to Point FC AL and Fabric A status type in the FC Status Menu showing the identification of the node e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 127 view port name A status type in the FC Status Menu showing the identification of the port world wide name A Name_ldentifier which is worldwide unique and represented by a 64 bit unsigned binary WWN value 128 Index A addressing 113 audience 7 authorized reseller HP 8 autobaud 21 Avis Canadien regulatory compliance notice 105 B batteries Taiwan EPA recycling and disposal 107 baud rate configuration Visual Manager 35 BSMI regulatory compliance notice 105 buffered tape writes Fibre Channel Visual Manager 43 bus reset on boot Visual Manager 44 C cables FCC compliance statement 104 shielded 104 Canada regulatory compliance notice 105 Class A equipment Canadian compliance statement 105 Class B equipment Canadian compliance statement 105 clock configuration Visual Manager 39 commond line interface 57 perform configuration 58 active fabric 78 baud rate 59 device mapping 68 add a host 72 add an entry 69 create an entry 70 delete a host 73 delete an entry 7 1 edit a host 73
111. n Interface card management on page 27 and Fibre Channel port configuration on page 42 FC arbitrated loop addressing On a Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop each device appears as an Arbitrated Loop Physical Address AL_PA To obtain an AL_PA two addressing methods called soft and hard addressing can be used by the interface card Soft addressing is the default setting For hard addressing the user specifies the AL_PA of the interface card Soft addressing When acquiring a soft address the interface card acquires the first available loop address starting from address 01 and moving up the list of available AL_PAs in the chart from 01 to EF In this mode the interface card obtains an available address automatically and then participates on the FC loop as long as there is at least one address available on the loop connected to the interface card Fibre Channel supports up to 126 devices on an Arbitrated Loop Hard addressing When acquiring a hard address the interface card attempts to acquire the AL_PA value specified by the user in the configuration settings If the desired address is not available at loop initialization time the interface card comes up on the FC loop using an available soft address This allows both the loop and the unit to continue to operate An example of this scenario would be when another device on the Arbitrated Loop has acquired the same address as that configured on the interface card Hard addressin
112. n in Figure 2 Figure 2 Operation indictors 3 o o L o T o o NO9V39 ISOS am Table 3 Operation indicators Description Power LED Ethernet link indicator Ethernet activity indicator ACT activity LNK link LED indicators for the Fibre Channel port Activity indicators for the SCSI busses 1 0 Beacon indicator The LED functionality of the interface card is detailed below Power and Fault Pwr The bi color LED is green when power is active and is continuously amber colored when the interface card detects a fault condition Fibre Channel Act When green the right ACT indicator signifies a good Fibre Channel link Fibre Channel LNK When green the left LNK indicator signifies Fibre Channel port activity SCSI bus 0 1 When lit these green indicators signify SCSI activity on the bus corresponding to the number of the indicator Ethernet 10 100 When lit these green indicators signify Ethernet link status and activity Beacon This blue indicator can blink or light continuously for unit identification 10 Introduction How the HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card works The interface card is a device that translates the Fibre Channel Protocol FCP to and from the SCSI Protocol transparently transferring commands data and status information so that both the Fibre Channel FC and SCSI devices and hosts can communicate with each other Interconnectio
113. n is provided between two SCSI buses and one Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop or Switched Fabric making use of Fibre Channel s ability to encapsulate SCSI protocol packets Processing SCSI information The following section describes how the interface card processes SCSI information when attached to FC hosts 1 AFC host issues a command The FC host encapsulates the command in the FCP protocol and sends the packet to the interface card 2 The internal FC interface card receives the packet interprets the FC information and places the packet in buffer memory 3 The processor interprets the information and programs an internal SCSI controller to process the transaction 4 The SCSI controller sends the command to the SCSI device target 5 The SCSI target interprets the command and executes it 6 Data flows between the FC host and SCSI target through payload buffers 7 Response information flows from the SCSI target back to the FC host HP e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card features Fibre Channel features One FC port selectable between 4 25 2 125 and 1 0625 Gbps Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop FC AL including Point to Point configurations in arbitrated loop topology only and Switched Fabric FC SW topologies Private Loop Direct Attach PLDA profile compliant Class 3 operation with SCSI FCP protocol Supports FCP 2 error recovery protocol as specified in FCP 2 rev 04 and 05 for use with streaming devices such as tape
114. namic Host Configuration Protocol DHCP e When DHCP is enabled the interface card requests a dynamic IP address from a DHCP server on the Ethernet network The interface card must be rebooted before an IP address is requested from the DHCP server After the interface card is rebooted the HTTP session must be restarted The IP address is different from the former non DHCP IP address You can now use the serial interface to obtain the new IP address see Perform configuration on page 58 36 Visual manager user interface NOTE To use the DHCP feature a DHCP server must be operational on the Ethernet network If the DHCP feature is used when there is not DHCP server the standard for DHCP requires the interface card wait three minutes for a response from a DHCP server before timing out Some DHCP servers allow an extended lease reservation to be set up for an IP address by providing the server with the Ethernet MAC address The DHCP server always provides the same IP address to the interface card This setup can be useful for remote management of the interface card via Telnet or VM Because the method of setting up an extended lease reservation varies depending on the DHCP server being used Contact the Network Administrator for assistance Active fabric configuration The Active Fabric AF screen allows setup of a fibre target LUN for the interface card see Figure 20 Figure 20 Active Fabric screen o A e o a j S
115. ned by the user for instance http HPe1200 3204GbFC but the user must define the host name on the DNS server first for this to work To make changes to interface card settings use standard keyboard and mouse controls to input information and then select the Submit button to send the changes to the interface card A user name and password are required before any changes can be submitted The default user name is root and the default password is password HP recommends that you change the user name and password as soon as possible see Visual manager access on page 31 28 Interface card management Other than dynamic mapping changes any other changes will not take effect until the next time the interface card reboots You can force the interface card to reboot by selecting the Reboot option For more information about the Visual Manager interface refer to Visual manager access on page 31 EY NOTE For the VM interface s dynamic display of the interface card configuration to be presented properly use version 6 2 or later of Netscape s browser on non Solaris platforms or Netscape version 6 2 3 for Solaris platforms If using Internet Explorer use revision 6 0 or later FTP The interface card includes support of File Transfer Protocol FTP for updating firmware saving trace buffers and backing up restoring of configuration settings FTP functionality is described in more detail in Using the Command Line Int
116. nel protocol for SCSI FCP frame fip gigabit interface connector GBIC hardware path host bus adapter HBA HVD ID 124 See Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop A printed circuit assembly that translates data between the FC host processor s internal bus and the FC link This is also known as an HBA or Host Bus Adapter A device that uses Fibre Channel communications An opening at the back of the interface card that provides a fiber optic connection between the FC adapter and the FC host A FC term describing a list of values showing the physical hardware path of the FC host to the target device Format Bus_Converter Adapter_Address Protocol_Type Area Port Bus Target LUN Example 8 4 8 0 0 2 4 0 A fiber optic cable made from thin strands of glass through which data in the form of light pulses is transmitted LASER LED It is often used for high speed transmission over medium 200m to long 10km distances but it can be used for short distances lt 200m A generic FC term used to cover all transmission media types specified in the Fibre Channel Physical Layer standard FC PH such as optical fiber copper twisted pair and copper coaxial cable Logically the Fibre Channel is a bidirectional full duplex point to point serial data channel structured for high performance data communication Physically the Fibre Channel is an interconnection of multiple communication ports called N_Ports interconnected by
117. nm or 850 nm When using multimode fibre 50 nm shortwave lasers can be used with FC links less than 500m To achieve longer lengths single mode fibre is required The preferred fibre core size is 50 micron as this fibre has large bandwidth so that the distance is limited by the fibre attenuation A 62 5 micron core size is also supported for compatibility with existing FDDI installations Fibre of this type has smaller bandwidth and in this case the distance is limited by the fibre bandwidth A status type in the FC Status Menu showing the speed 1063 Mbps of the FC adapter A FC term describing a switched topology which is one of the three existing FC topologies Fabric elements interconnect various N_Ports or NL_Ports and are responsible for frame routing Transmission Control Protocol A device usually a peripheral that responds to an operation requested by an initiator usually a host system Peripherals are targets but for some commands for example a SCSI COPY command the peripheral may need to act temporarily as an initiator An electrical connection at each end of the SCSI bus composed of a set of resistors or possibly other components Its function is to provide a pull up for open collector drivers on the bus and also impedance matching to prevent signal reflections at the ends of the cable The SCSI bus requires termination at both ends of the bus One end of the SCSI bus is terminated by the SCSI adapter s internal ter
118. onfiguration menu Figure 75 Trace dump menu Trace Dump Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Display trace for current boot cycle 2 Display trace from previous boot cycle 3 Display trace from last assertion failure 4 Clear current trace buffer 5 Clear flash assert trace buffer X Return to previous menu Select 1 to display trace history for the current boot cycle Select 2 to display trace history from the previous boot cycle Select 3 to display trace history from the last assertion failure Select 4 to clear the current trace buffer If cleared then the Display trace from current boot cycle option does not show any data Select 5 to clear the assert trace buffer If cleared then the Display trace from last assertion failure option does not show any data Get a copy of trace buffer To save copies of the trace buffers over FTP 1 Connect the interface card to the Ethernet network used by your computer 2 Start your FTP program using the interface card s IP address ftp lt IP address gt NOTE Ifthe IP address of the interface card is not known or needs to be changed connect to the interface card using a serial connection The current interface card IP address is displayed and can be changed in the serial Ethernet Configuration menu The default network setting is DHCP EY NOTE You may also need to specify the directory location on your computer o
119. ormance Mode 4 Gigabits Y Force FCP Response Code Disabled FC OVERRIDE SETTINGS Fibre Channel port settings Link Status indicates the port link status Port Mode default N_Port sets the port mode Port Mode settings Auto Sense In this mode the Fibre Channel port tries to negotiate as a loop If it is not successful then the Fibre Channel port negotiates as a fabric If the port comes up as a loop it then determines whether it is on a private or public loop N_Port default This mode allows the interface card to bypass the loop negotiation and come up as a fabric only If the interface card is on a loop and N_Port mode is selected an error in communication may occur Use Hard AL_PA enables or disables Hard AL_PA usage Hard AL_PA Settings displays the AL_PA Lookup Table Use the table to find the node number This unique one byte valid value derived from an Arbitrated Loop Topology defined in ANSI specification FC_AL version 4 5 is used for the Fibre Channel configuration Discovery Mode default Manual Discovery Only determines how the interface card discovers new Fibre Channel devices Discovery mode settings Auto Discovery on Reboot allows the interface card to automatically discover all Fibre Channel devices when rebooted or when link up events occur such as connecting cables or rebooting network hubs e Both the ports and the devices behind the ports are discovered on all subsequent link up events Disc
120. ost library features SFP Diagnostics Optical transceiver status is monitored and recorded FCP Driver Fibre Channel Protocol driver functionality is monitored and recorded FCP Management Fibre Channel Protocol management functionality is monitored and recorded PS Management Parallel SCSI functionality is monitored and recorded SG List Scatter gather list is monitored and recorded FCP RMI Fibre Channel Protocol routing layer is monitored and recorded e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 51 Table 6 Trace Settings A AA AAA INBAND Controller management functionality is monitored and recorded Queue Element Debugging capability for specific interface card resources Current previous and last assert trace displays These three Utilities menu screens show trace information The Current Traces screen shows data since the interface card was last booted The Previous Traces screen shows data from the last boot cycle The Last Assert Traces screen shows data since the last assertion Trace buffers can be cleared by selecting either the Clear Current Traces option or the Clear Assert Traces option Clear current trace buffer or assert trace buffer Trace buffers can be cleared by selecting either the Clear Current Traces option or the Clear Assert Traces option When the Clear Current Traces option is selected a confirmation message appears to verify the se
121. overy on Link Up allows the interface card to automatically discover all Fibre Channel devices when rebooted or when link up events occur such as connecting cables or rebooting network hubs Visual manager user interface Both the ports and the devices behind the ports are discovered for the first link up event Subsequent link up events only discover the ports and not the devices behind the ports e Manual Discovery Only default sets discovery of new devices to occur only after the user selects the Discovery option from the Main menu or when a Registered State Change Notification RSCN is received from a fabric Buffered Tape Writes default enabled enables or disables the Buffered Tape Write option CAUTION If this configuration setting is incorrectly set processing difficulties may occur Before changing this setting evaluate the need for the change and verify the desired setting HP recommends backing up the interface card configuration to an external file before making changes to this setting When enabled to enhance performance Buffered Tape Writes return status on consecutive write commands prior to the tape device receiving data Buffered Tape Queue Depth sets the Buffered Tape Queue Depth Select a setting of O through 10 from the drop down list Default Map default indexed sets the current mapping mode for the selected port The current map can be set to Indexed default HP recommends that this map N
122. p changes NOTE Resetting to factory defaults through VM does not affect Ethernet connectivity User configured values for the IP address and gateway are retained 40 Visual manager user interface Ports menu Accessed from the Main menu the Ports menu is used to view and to modify configuration settings of the Fibre Channel port and SCSI buses see Figure 24 Figure 24 Ports menu O HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot PORTS MENU FC Porto SCSI Bus 0 SCSI Bus 1 Link Status World Wide Node Name Port Name Port Mode Use Hard AL_PA Source ID Discovery Mode Buffered Tape Writes Default Map Performance Mode gt gt Overrides Hi Sup Bit INQUIRY Data Force FCP Response Code Initiator Bit PRLI ACCEPT Payload FC Confirm Bit PRLI ACCEPT Payload Force FLOGI in Private Loop SCSI BUS 0 Primary Initiator ID Discovery Discovery Delay Bus Reset On Boot Internal Termination SCSI BUS 1 Primary Initiator ID Discovery Discovery Delay Bus Reset On Boot Internal Termination SFP TRANSCEIVER IN FC PORT 0 UP FABRIC 0x100000E00203174B 0x100000E00223174B N_Port No 0x290300 Manual Discovery Only Enabled Queue Depth 5 Indexed 4 Gigabit Clear Disabled Disabled Enabled Disabled 7 Enabled 30 seconds Enable
123. password 4 Specify binary mode bin 5 Specify the firmware s path and filename d1x file with the put command put lt path filename dlx gt a file will transfer and the interface card will reboot The interface card will then be using the new irmware EY NOTE You may want to confirm the new firmware level by checking the reboot messages on the interface card through the serial interface e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 91 92 Using the FTP interface 8 Troubleshooting Various problems can arise when configuring and using the HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card This section is provided to help guide the user through some of the basic methods of identifying faults in the setup and configuration of the unit Most problems are found in the initial installation In general it is wise to check all connections and review the configuration before proceeding with further trouble analysis Simplify the installation if possible reducing it to the most basic configuration then adding elements one at a time and verifying the operation at each step General troubleshooting What happens if the DHCP server cannot be contacted Serial Interface the following occurs over the serial line the following text appears above the HP Systems Main Menu within the terminal window Attempting to contact DHCP server After about 3 minutes the following message appears Can t renew DHCP boot lease
124. place the copied file into the C WINNT inf folder The Hardware Wizard will then compile the INF file to a PNF file with the same root filename and use its interface card model entry information to install or register the newly discovered device 4 Reboot the host PC to complete the process as prompted by the Hardware Wizard Verify SCSI bus configuration Problems with SCSI bus configuration are common Basic operation of a SCSI bus can be checked by using the configuration menu to view attached SCSI devices Other conditions to look for include Termination Problems with termination can cause intermittent or hard failure A SCSI bus must be terminated on both ends and only both ends Termination issues when both narrow and wide devices are on the same bus are common Check to make sure that there are no loose terminators All terminators should be firmly attached Bus Type The SE and LVD devices can be connected to the same SCSI bus however on power up if at least one SE device is detected the LVD devices must convert to SE mode and SE mode will be used Only the LVD interface is being specified for the Fast 40 and higher rates Device ID Each device on a SCSI bus must have a unique ID Also check the configured ID s for the interface card to verify these are not in use by other devices on the same SCSI bus Cabling Check SCSI cables to verify that they are functional SCSI rules for total length distance bet
125. port on page 97 Indicators The interface card is equipped with LED indicators for monitoring overall unit status The LED functionality of the interface card is detailed below Power and Fault Pwr This indicator is a bi color LED When green this indicator shows that power is currently active Lack of power indication suggests that the unit is turned off a problem with the power supplied to the unit or an internal problem with the unit When this indicator is amber this indicator shows that the interface card detects a fault condition Faults can occur as a result of Power On Self Test POST failure or operational failures It is normal for this indicator to flash on when the unit is powered up or reset If the fault indicator stays lit contact your product support representative Fibre Channel Act LNK When lit green the right indicator signifies a good Fibre Channel link on the port When lit green the left indicator signifies Fibre Channel port activity If the Link indicator fails to light at all or if the Activity indicator stays continually lit without corresponding activity on a FC device port there may be a problem with the Fibre Channel configuration Verify the Fibre Channel configuration SCSI Bus 0 1 When lit these green indicators signify SCSI activity on the bus corresponding to the number of the indicator Activity should only occur briefly during power up or configuration and relatively often when the
126. ption saves the current configuration state in FLASH which updates the saved previous configuration state Saved changes are retained across future device resets or power cycles Restore last saved configuration This option restores the most recently saved configuration This can be useful when configuration changes are made but the user wishes to return to the previously saved configured state The changes take effect after the interface card has rebooted Reset to factory defaults This option resets all current configuration options to the factory defaults and saves those options to FLASH memory as the current configuration The changes take effect after the interface card has rebooted System utilities Figure 63 System utility menu System Utility Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 System Statistics Menu 2 Event Log 3 Runtime Report 4 Enter System Diagnostics Mode 5 Special Fibre Channel Link States 6 SCSI Command Tracking X Return to main menu e Select 1 to display the System Statistics menu described later in this chapter Select 2 to display the Event Log menu described later in this chapter Select 3 to view the Runtime Report described later in this chapter Select 4 to enter diagnostics mode A confirmation message appears verifying that you want to do this If you enter N for No you are returned to the System Utilities menu If you enter Y for Y
127. ptions Description Receive data to HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card Serial common Ground Transmit data from HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 99 DB 9 pin assignments In conjunction with the pin assignments provided for the 3 pin receptacle on the rear panel of the HP e1200 320 4Gb Interface Card following are the corresponding pin out assignments for a DB 9 serial connector used to connect the other end of the serial cable to a terminal or a computer running terminal emulation software The pin assignments given in Figure 78 for the DB 9 serial connection are in reference to the serial connector at the end of the cable Use an RS 232 null modem cable to connect the HP el 200 320 4Gb Interface Card to the host system EY NOTE To connect the Interface interface card to a host system use the RS 232 Serial3 Pin to DB 9 cable included in the shipping container for this product Figure 78 Corresponding pin outs of the DB 9 connector Table 10 DB 9 connector description Number Description No connection RX data Receive TX data Transmit No connection Signal ground No connection RTS Request to Send not used CTS Clear to Send not used 0 o NI OCO oa AJ OJ N No connection 100 Serial and Ethernet pin assignments RJ 45 Ethernet Pin Assignments The pin assignments given for the RJ
128. r Readme txt file for configuration specifics An HBA may require a different configuration depending on whether it is connected to a loop or a switch HBAs typically come with utility programs to view or change their configurations Running diagnostics You can run a diagnostics wrap test from Diagnostics Mode in the serial interface Technical support If you are unable to resolve an issue contact your authorized service representative and ask for technical support HP technical support Telephone numbers for worldwide technical support are listed on the HP support web site http www hp com supporl Collect the following information before calling Technical support registration number if applicable Product serial numbers Product model names and numbers e Applicable error messages e Operating system type and revision level Detailed specific questions For continuous quality improvement calls may be recorded or monitored e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 97 98 Troubleshooting A Serial and Ethernet pin assignments RJ 11 pin assignments The pin assignments given for the 3 pin serial connection are in reference to the serial receptacle on the rear panel of the HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card Use an RS 232 null modem cable to connect the HP e1 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card to the host system Figure 77 RJ 11 pin assignments Fro rtV iew Table 9 RJ 11 pin descri
129. r network where your FTP program stores the trace file 3 Use root as the user name and password as the password 4 Specify Bin mode bin 5 Specify the filename txt file with the get command e For the current trace buffer use get curtrace txt e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 87 Reboot e For the previous trace buffer use get prvtrace txt The file transfers from the interface card When this option is selected a confirmation message appears to verify the selection If a response of Y yes is given to the confirmation message current interface card activities are disrupted while the unit restarts itself The last saved configuration changes also take effect after the interface card powers on again Download a new revision of the firmware When this option is selected a confirmation message appears to verify the selection If a response of Y yes is given to the confirmation message current interface card activities are interrupted while the unit begins accepting the new firmware from the serial port To download firmware using a terminal or terminal emulator connected to the serial port of the interface card la oe 6 From the Main menu select the Download a New Revision of the Firmware option to start the download procedure When you confirm you want to download the interface card starts the download process Use the Transfer gt Send File option in the terminal emu
130. r port or bus click the desired Fibre Channel port or SCSI bus To open the Network Configuration menu click the Ethernet port e Interface card status information is located in the body of the home page and includes platform information e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide Main menu options e Home displays interface card status information e System configures standard system components Ports configures the Fibre Channel port and SCSI buses e Discovery displays devices and discovers new devices e Mapping displays and configures maps e Statistics displays interface card statistics e Utilities configures utility settings e Report displays system information e Reboot restarts the interface card System menu The System menu is accessed from the Main menu and is used to view and configure serial network active fabric user real time clock and factory settings reset see Figure 17 Figure 17 System page i O gt HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot SYSTEM MENU Serial Network Active Fabric User Real Time Clock RESET MENU Factory Settings Reset System menu Name Baud Rate ACTIVE FABRIC Name Backup Mode Controller LUNS Serial configures the baud rate Status 115200
131. rd will reboot The interface card will then be using the configuration E NOTE World Wide Name WWN values and Ethernet physical address MAC address values will revert to the factory default settings Any user defined values for these settings are not retained and must be re entered after a configuration is restored See Configuration backup procedure on page 89 for more information Ef NOTE Confirm the new configuration by checking that the settings are correct Get a copy of trace buffer or event log Using the following procedure you can save copies of the trace buffers or event log over FTP 1 Connect the interface card to the ethernet network used by your computer 2 Start your FTP program using the interface card s IP address ftp lt IP address gt IMPORTANT The network settings set to use DHCP need to be set to default If the IP address is not known use the serial interface to obtain the network settings See Setting up serial port communications on page 22 EY NOTE You may also need to specify the directory location on your computer or network where your FTP program will store the trace file Ef NOTE If the interface card is to use a static IP address the pre filled in address when DHCP is disabled is 1 1 1 1 and should be changed to an address that is appropriate for the IP network it will reside on 3 Enter the user name and password The default values for user name and pa
132. rding to the SCSI standard for Reset to Selection Time This value may need to be increased to ensure that all SCSI devices complete their individual power ups With Discovery enabled the Discovery Delay lengthens the time taken by the interface card to reboot Select 5 to toggle the SCSI termination mode between Enabled and Disabled This option is automatically set to Enabled for Internal termination The Internal setting allows the interface card to internally terminate a SCSI connection Setting this option to Disabled allows the SCSI bus not the interface card to handle SCSI terminations Select 6 to access menu settings for the maximum SCSI bus connection speed described later in this chapter Note that when this option is selected the user is prompted to select a Target ID on the currently selected bus Currently maximum speed settings are shown e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 65 SCSI initiator menu This option allows for setting up the SCSI Initiator Figure 46 SCSI initiator menu SCSI Initiator Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Initiator Configuration Bus 0 Initiator ID O 1 Select primary SCSI Initiator ID 2 Enable Disable alternate SCSI ID The alternate ID is used to enhance the performance of status agent commands that are being issued to a serial device To use this feature enable the alternate ID and pick an ID that i
133. re 66 below shows the status and statistics for a Fibre Channel loop Similar data can also be shown for a Fibre Channel fabric Figure 66 Fibre Channel status 8 statistics Fibre Channel Status Statistics X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Current Fibre Channel Status Port 0 LinkState DOWN ALPA x00000000 InDevDataSeqs x00000000 OutDevDataSeq x00000000 InLnkDataSeqs x00000000 OutLnkDataSeq x00000000 InP_BSYFrames x00000000 OutP_BSYFrms x00000000 InF_BSYFrames x00000000 InP_RJTFrames x00000000 OutP_RJTFrame x00000000 LinkDowns x00000000 InABTSs x00000000 OutABTSs x00000000 LaserFaults x00000000 SignalLosses x00000001 SyncLosses x00000001 BadRxChars x000000FF LinkFailures x00000001 BadCRCFrames x00000000 ProtocolErrs x00000000 BadSCSIFrames x00000000 UnderflowErrs x00000000 A Autorepeat C Clear Statistics X Return to previous menu Command gt Table 7 Fibre Channel status LinkState is the current FC link status AL_PA is the arbitrated loop physical address InDevDataSeqs is the number of device data sequences received by this port OutDevDataSeq is the number of device data sequences transmitted by this port InLnkDataSegs is the number of link data frames received by this port OutLnkDataSeq is the number of link data frames transmitted by this port InP_BSYFrames is the number of P_BSY frames received by this port OutP_BSYFrms
134. ries is protocol port dependent Ef NOTE Control of the editing process is done with simple single letter commands Select N and P to scroll up and down the map entries Select X to return to the Map Edit menu Select A to add a new entry to the map or D to delete an already existing entry in the map Select R to remove the gaps in the map EY NOTE SCSI devices attached to a Fibre Channel port must be mapped as sequential FC LUNs starting at LUN number 00 Skipping LUN numbers is not recommended when mapping FC LUNs because FC Discovery stops the discovery process whenever an empty LUN position is found Adding an entry To add a new entry the user must enter the desired Index If the selected Index is already present in the map the user is asked to confirm the override or enter different address information Next the operator is prompted for the protocol and port at which a device selection list is generated Devices may not be mapped to their native port The following is an example of adding an entry for an FCP map Figure 49 Adding an FCP port entry Enter desired Index gt 0 Select Protocol 0 SCSI 1 AF X Cancel gt 0 Select SCSI Port Port 0 1 X Cancel gt 1 EY NOTE If the operator selects a device with LUN all LUNs for this Target are added to the map e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 69 Ef NOTE Hi Sup Bit is only
135. rt it accesses the devices that are in this map by default Select 9 to edit the FC override settings When this option is selected the following menu appears e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 63 Following are descriptions for each of the override settings Ey NOTE Normally override settings should not be changed except when directed to do so by an authorized HP technician Select 1 to toggle the Hi Sup Bit between SET and CLEAR The default setting is CLEAR This option should be toggled to SET when the server uses the Hi Sup bit to scan for FC LUNs greater than eight Ef NOTE Hi Sup Bit is only set in an Active Fabric LUN which needs to be mapped as the first device FC LUN 00 Select 2 to toggle the Force FCP Response Code between OFF and ON for support of Compagqspecific HBAs 223180 B21 and 120186 001 The default setting is OFF Select 3 to toggle the Initiator Target Bit Setting in PRLI between INITIATOR Bit Set TARGET Bit Set INITIATOR amp TARGET Bits Set and INITIATOR amp TARGET Bits CLEAR This should be configured to one of the options for SET on both interface cards routers when using the interface card in an interface card to router configuration a configuration where at least one interface card router appears as a target to at least one other interface card router that appears as an initiator The default setting is INITIATOR amp TARGET Bits SET Select
136. s 0x00000000 Reboot FC Link Down 0x00000000 In Aborts 0x00000000 Out Aborts 0x00000000 Laser Faults 0x00000000 Los 0x00000002 Sync 0x00000002 Bad Rx Characters Ox000000FF Link Failures 0x00000003 Bad CRCs 0x00000000 Protocol Errors 0x00000000 Bad SCSI Frames 0x00000000 Reset FC amp SCSI System Statistics SCSIBUS 0 STATISTICS Mode Resets SCSI BUS 1 STATISTICS Mode Resets To view information for a specific port or bus click the component on the menu bar or the interface card image To refresh the display select Reset FC amp SCSI System Statistics 48 Visual manager user interface Utilities menu O HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses A BIOS INITIALIZATION MAIN MENU Platform ID Initialization Home Memory Test Initialization System Calendar Power Initialization Ports Calendar Initialization Discovery Indicator Initialization Mapping Resource List Initialization Statistics SCSI Configuration Utilities Report BOOTUP INITIALIZATION Reboot SCSI Port 0 Script RAM UTILITIES MENU SCSI Port 1 Script RAM FTP Utility SCSI Port 0 POST Trace Settings SCSI Port 1 POST Current Traces FC Poto POST Previous Traces Ethernet POST Test Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking Utilities menu tasks FTP Utility opens an FTP session Trace Sett
137. s 4 s ecw A te sacle sh Lg Wh ok a a cd ad Hos alee Ae Ae Ia 106 Taiwan battery recycling notice 4 n on ra A GRA das 107 A SCSk commands ova hee Rha e eed OS eR Ree eRe eee eee ee TS 109 Gen ral commandS seses steiert aaa Gelb Gh ake eh Gea Whe AS wah See cE a WR Ro Rs ASR Hd 109 Report LUNs command sii 109 GUI commandi span ke Re ER II e kya ARCS 110 EVPD Page 0x80 o cscs ca ka dees assos ai Galas Bala Ge naw he naw be les 111 Device Identification Page O46 ld Suk ody da Ree Ko Oe AER GA a ee oom ee 111 D Addressing structures and operations 4 42 s s4sessieweeedegecdas 113 Auto Assigned addressing option o on dre boos ae 28444 de a Aseos 114 Indexed addressing option si adn AIN RecN NA 115 SCC addressing Opera ies Sw dk E E A Rs Se eo a 115 E Enabling DHCP on the HP el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card 117 Setting up DHCP over interface card interfaces 0 tte ene 118 Serial and Telnet mia ii o pdas 118 Special note regarding Ethernet IP subnet mask and gateway addresses o o ooo o o 120 ul sas A Rd Rae RI eo a Ea Dia 121 Tips for manipulating DHCP within Visual Manager o oooooooooooo 121 E A ea aca be ASE E SRA ha Bee ee aes 123 WM it bath Ole ee eee eee eee be beta eee eH 129 About this guide This guide provides information about e Installing the HP StorageWorks el 200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card e Configuring the HP StorageWorks e1200 320 4Gb FC Interface Card e Troubl
138. s behind the ports Manual Discovery is the default selection and sets discovery of new devices to only occur after the user selects the Refresh Device Display option from the Display Attached Fibre Channel Devices menu located under Main menu gt System Utilities gt System Statistics gt Display Fibre Channel Protocol Status gt Display Attached Fibre Channel Devices gt Refresh Device Display Select 6 to toggle Buffered Tape Writes to enabled or disabled Buffered Tape Writes is an option designed to enhance system performance By returning status on consecutive write commands prior to the tape device receiving data Buffered Tape Writes remove the latency of waiting for responses from the tape device In the event that data does not transfer correctly for any reason the interface card returns a check condition on a subsequent command Ef NOTE The default setting is enabled If the application requires confirmation of individual blocks being written to the medium such as audit trail tapes or log tapes this option should be disabled Select 7 to change the Tape Backup Queue Depth Select a value from O through 10 Select 8 to change the Default Map Value for the current port This can be Indexed Auto assigned or SCC The default setting is Indexed The FC Auto assigned map contains all the SCSI devices that are attached to the interface card NOTE When a new initiator contacts the interface card through the selected po
139. s currently unused on this bus 3 Select alternate SCSI Initiator ID X Return to previous menu e Select 1 to select the primary SCSI Initiator ID This is the ID for the SCSI device that requests operations from other SCSI devices known as targets This should be a unique ID on the bus This value is initially blank and the user must enter an integer value in the range of 0 15 prior to saving the configuration to the interface card Select 2 to enable disable an alternate SCSI Initiator ID Select 3 to select an alternate SCSI Initiator ID This should be a unique ID on the bus The default value is 6 This option is used to enhance the performance of status agent commands issued to a serial device 66 Using the Command Line Interface Maximum SCSI bus speed menu This option allows for setting the maximum SCSI bus speed When this option is selected the user must first select the Target ID for the bus before this menu appears Figure 47 SCSI bus speed configuration menu 1 2 3 X Bus 0 SCSI Bus Speed Configuration Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Maximum SCSI Bus speed set to Ultra320 320 MB Set Maximum Speed to Ultra320 320 MB Set Maximum Speed to Fast 160 160 MB Set Maximum Speed to Ultra 2 80 MB Return to previous menu Target 15 Current Configuration 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Select 1 to set the maximum SCSI bus speed to Ultra320 T
140. set in an Active Fabric LUN which needs to be mapped as the first device FC LUN 00 Select a number from the left column Num to add a device to the map Selecting a device where LUN adds all LUNS for this target If the selected device is already mapped an error message appears to warn the user about adding a duplicate device N and P controls allow scrolling up and down the device list X brings the user back to the Edit Map Entries display table Creating an entry The user can create an empty map or use an existing map to pre enter devices that are not yet online To perform this operation the user has to know all the essential information about the device A series of questions are asked to guide the user through the process The questions vary based on the current map protocol The user is asked to Select the LUN address for a device e The protocol port on which device it resides The Name for the device which can be left empty And the type of device Figure 50 Creating an entry for FCP port map Enter desired lun address gt 1 Select Protocol 0 SCSI X Cancel gt 0 Enter desired Device Name could be empty gt DISK_DEVICE 0 TAPE_DEVICE PRINTER_DEVICE 2 PROCESSOR_DEVICE SCANNER_DEVICE 6 OPTICAL_DEVICE 0 2 WORM_DEVICE 4 CDROM_DEVICE 5 6 8 oO N 0 UU Pp MEDIUM_CHGR_DEVICE 8 COMM_DEVI
141. sical Link Module PLM See FC SCSI Hardware Path ID See FC Adapter High Voltage Differential Numerical identifier indexed addressing A menu name It allows for generic Fibre Channel host bus adapters to access SCSI devices initiator initiator mode IP link longwave loop address loop port nl_port LUN LVD SE mapping table MB motherboard multiplexer N_port N_port identifier node name attached to the interface card using a table which is indexed by sequential LUN values A device usually a host system that requests an operation to be performed by another device known as a target usually a peripheral Configuration mode of the interface card in which a Fibre Channel initiator requests operations to be performed by a SCSI target device Internet protocol For Fibre Channel it is a connection between two nodes each having at least one N_Port or the other end could be an F Port interconnected by a pair of optical or copper links one inbound and one outbound Lasers or LEDs that emit light with wave lengths around 1300 nm When using single mode 9 nm fibre longwave lasers can be used to achieve lengths greater than 2 km A FC term indicating the unique ID of a node in Fibre Channel loop topology sometimes referred to as a Loop ID Also a status type in the FC Status Menu showing the FC Loop Address of the interface card A FC port that supports loops Logical Unit Number or
142. ssage Event log erased by Operator Firmware image 5 7 1adw2 Version 5 7 received and stored to flash New device is added to location 0 0 0 New device is added to location 0 1 0 New device is added to location 1 2 0 Unit restart and initialization Firmware Version 5 7 Build Level 5 7 1adw2 FC Port 0 Link is UP Firmware image 5 7 1b Version 5 7 received and stored to flash New device is added to location 0 0 0 New device is added to location 0 1 0 New device is added to location 1 2 0 Unit restart and initialization Firmware Version 5 7 Build Level 5 7 1b FC Port 0 Link is UP CHK COND with Sense Key 0x4 ASC 0x8 ASCQ 0x0 from SCSI LUN 0 1 0 CHK COND with Sense Key 0x4 AS 8 ASC 0 from SCSI LUN 1 2 0 CHK COND with Sense Key 0x4 ASC 0x8 ASCQ 0x0 from SCSI LUN 0 0 0 Reboot requested via main serial menu FC Port 0 Link is DOWN Unit restart and initialization Firmware Version 5 7 Build Level 5 7 1b FC Port 0 Link is UP New device is added to location 0 0 0 53 Clear event log The Clear Event Log screen is used to clear the Event Log see Figure 37 Current interface card activities are not disrupted Figure 37 Clear event log screen HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller CA MAIN MENU Home System Ports Discovery Mapping Statistics Utilities Report Reboot To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Clear Event Log This command will clear the event log Clear Event Log No Yes O
143. ssword are root for the user name and password for the password 4 Specify Bin mode bin 5 Specify the filename txt file with the get command e For the current trace buffer use get curtrace txt e For the previous trace buffer use get prvtrace txt e For the assert trace buffer use get assertlog txt e For the current event log use get eventlog txt 90 Using the FTP interface The file will transfer to the current directory specified on your computer s FTP utility If running FTP from a DOS or Linux command line the destination directory can be set using the lcd command ex 1ca c myCfg Updating firmware Using the following procedure FTP can be used to update the interface card firmware 1 Connect the interface card to the Ethernet network used by your computer 2 Start your FTP program using the interface card s IP address ftp lt IP address gt IMPORTANT The network settings set to use DHCP need to be set to default If the IP address is not known use the serial interface to obtain the network settings See Setting up serial port communications on page 22 n EY NOTE Ifthe interface card is to use a static IP address the pre filled in address when DHCP is disabled is 1 1 1 1 and should be changed to an address that is appropriate for the IP network it will reside on 3 Enter the user name and password The default values for user name and password are root for the user name and password for the
144. t name post power on self test POST processor reset SCSI responder SAN SCC addressing SCSI SCSI adapter 126 Taking the interface card offline indicates that all SCSI and FC adapters in the interface card are offline Taking a SCSI adapter offline means ending inputs outputs and suspending all transactions going from the interface card to the specified SCSI devices The SCSI adapter is no longer active or available for access Taking a FC adapter offline means ending inputs outputs and suspending all transactions going from the interface card to the specified FC device For the interface card online indicates that at least one adapter in the interface card is active and available for access For a SCSI adapter online indicates the SCSI adapter is active and available for access and input output processing For a FC adapter online indicates the FC adapter is active and available for access and input output processing The Fibre Channel N_Port responsible for starting an exchange A FC originator is comparable to a SCSI initiator One of three existing FC topologies in which two ports are directly connected by a link with no fabric loop or switching elements present The interface card which uses FC AL to support Point to Point configurations A field value under the FC Status Menu the FC port identifier a 64 bit value the factory assigns to each FC adapter See Power On Self Test A group of tests run
145. ted 40 SCSI bus reset on boot 44 configuration of 43 discovery mode 44 initiator IDs 44 settings 44 SCSI bus configuration screen illustrated 43 serial configuration 35 Serial screen illustrated 35 statistics information viewing 48 Statistics menu illustrated 48 System Menu 34 System Menu illustrated 34 Trace Settings screen illustrated 5 1 traces clearing buffers 52 configuration 5 user configuration 38 utilities configuration 49 options 49 Utilities menu illustrated 49 W warning rack stability 8 warnings lasers radiation 104 web sites HP documentation 7 HP storage 8 HP Subscriber s choice 8 132
146. ted media type Multi Mode Fiber 4 25 Gbit Dual LC connectors To connect the interface card to the Fibre Channel SAN 1 Locate the Fibre Channel port on the interface card see Figure 1 on page 9 2 Remove the rubber protector from the SFP 3 With the library powered off connect the interface card into the Fibre Channel environment using the appropriate cabling The FC optical connector on the interface card is keyed Be sure to insert the cable connectors in the proper orientation SCSI connection 20 The interface card can support Fast Ultra320 Narrow Wide SCSI depending on the specific configuration The interface card is factory configured to support IVD Single Ended buses Two VHDCI 68 pin D shell P type connectors are available allowing the unit to be attached at the end of up to two SCSI buses The interface card must always be installed at the end of SCSI buses The interface card supplies termination power TERMPWR to each SCSI bus An internal self resetting fuse in the TERMPWR resets after a fault is cleared A CAUTION Do not plug HVD devices to an LVD SE bus Failure to follow this caution may result in severe damage to equipment A CAUTION SCSI ports on the interface card are not hot pluggable Power off the library whenever connecting disconnecting the SCSI cables Installation cabling and setup To connect the interface card to a SCSI bus 1 Power off the SCSI devices on this bus 2 Conne
147. tics Utilities Repot Reboot UTILITIES MENU FTP Utility Trace Settings Current Traces Previous Traces Last Assert Traces Clear Current Traces Clear Assert Traces Event Log Settings Event Log Clear Event Log SCSI Cmd Tracking o AA e SE ju p E va g 3 5 art 3 HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses Trace Settings Configuration 0 General Errors 1 FCP Driver OFF 3 FCP Managment OFF vw on 2 FCP Transport OFF Y 4 PS Transport OFF w 5 PSManagment OFF w 7 SG List OFF v 9 FCP RMI OFF v 41 INBAND OFF 6 PS Driver OFF 8 Timing 10 AF OFF 12 Multi Host Lib OFF w 13 Queue Element OFF v 14 SFP Diagnostics OFF To change the settings use the drop down boxes and choose the desired setting After all changes are completed select Submit Table 6 is a brief description list of the trace settings Table 6 Trace Settings General Errors Displays the most serious error and exception conditions FCP Transport Fibre Channel Protocol transport functionality is monitored and recorded PS Transport Parallel SCSI transport functionality is monitored and recorded PS Driver Parallel SCSI driver functionality is monitored and recorded Timing Timer functions are monitored and recorded AF Active Fabric firmware is monitored and recorded Multi Host Lib Debugging capability for Multi h
148. tocol The default setting is enabled When enabled the interface card retrieves a dynamic IP address from a DHCP server located on the Ethernet network that the interface card is connected to If DHCP is disabled and then enabled it is necessary to save the current configuration and reboot the interface card before an IP address can be requested from the DHCP server Use the following four steps a Select X Return to previous menu b Select A Save Configuration c Select X Return to previous menu d Select 4 Reboot After the interface card finishes rebooting the Main menu appears on the serial interface but for Telnet a new session needs to be opened to continue configuring the interface card DHCP status can be verified from the Ethernet Configuration menu where DHCP Configuration is indicated as Enabled if DHCP has been successfully activated Note that the IP address may also appear different than the former non DHCP IP address EY NOTE To use the DHCP feature a DHCP server must be operational on the Ethernet network used by the interface card If the DHCP feature is used when there is no DHCP server the standard for DHCP requires that the interface card wait three minutes for a response from a DHCP server before timing out Your DHCP server may allow you to set up a extended lease reservation for an IP address by providing the server with the Ethernet MAC address of the interface card This sets the DHCP server to always
149. ttings Figure 60 Special event log settings Special Event Log Settings X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 45 Abort Event Logging Disabled Reservation Release Events Logging Disabled Prevent Media Removal Events Logging Disabled 1 Toggle Abort Event Logging 2 Toggle Reservation Release Event Logging 3 Toggle Prevent Media Removal Event Logging U Update Current Operating Special Event Logging X Return to Previous menu Enter 1 to toggle Abort Event Logging Enter 2 to toggle Reservation Release Event Logging Enter 3 to toggle Prevent Media Removal Event Logging Select U to send event configuration changes to the interface card now e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 77 Real Time clock configuration When this option is selected from the Perform Configuration menu the System Clock Setup menu appears NOTE The time is based on a 24 hour clock There is no a m or p m designation For example 1 00 p m is 13 hours OO minutes or 13 00 Figure 61 System clock setup menu System Clock Setup Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 TUESDAY Date 07 7 2005 Time 08 56 22 1 Set clock X Return to previous menu Select 1 to set the clock A series of three prompts appear allowing the set up of 24 hour time hh mm ss current date mm dd yyyy and the day of wee
150. twork configuration Visual Manager 36 noise declaration German 106 O operations 113 P performance mode Fibre Channel Visual Manager 43 port communications 22 port mode Fibre Channel Visual Manager 42 R rack stability warning 8 reboot 88 rebooting Visual Manager 56 recycling Taiwan EPA battery 107 regulatory compliance notices BSMI 105 Canada 105 Class A 103 Class B 103 European Union 105 IEC EMC statement worldwide 105 Japan 106 Korean 106 lasers 104 modifications 104 shielded cables 104 related documentation 7 removal 4 removing an interface card 15 report option Visual Manager 55 RFI EMI connector hoods 104 S SCSI bus bus reset on boot Visual Manager 44 configuration of Visual Manager 43 discovery settings Visual Manager 44 Initiator and Target settings Visual Manager 44 security configuration Visual Manager 38 serial port communications 22 connection 21 statistics information viewing Visual Manager 48 structures 113 subnet mask Visual Manager 36 Subscriber s choice HP 8 symbols in text 7 system utilities 79 diagnostics 85 event log 84 FC link control 86 runtime report 84 SCSI command tracking 86 system statistics 80 T Taiwan EPA battery recycling and disposal 107 technical support HP 8 telephone numbers FCC questions 104 text symbols 7 traces clearing buffers Visual Manager 52 configuration of Visual Manager 51 troubleshooting 93 basic verification 94 configurat
151. uired before any changes can be submitted The default user name is root and the default password is password HP recommends that you change the user name and password as soon as possible Other than dynamic mapping changes any other changes will not take effect until the next time the interface card reboots You can force the interface card to reboot by selecting the Reboot option NOTE For the VM interface s dynamic display of the interface card configuration to be presented y play 9 p properly use version 6 2 or later of Netscape s browser on non Solaris platforms or Netscape version 6 2 3 for Solaris platforms If using Internet Explorer use revision 6 0 or later Visual manager access Visual Manager VM can be accessed from any standard Web browser 1 Connect an RJ45 Ethernet cable to the back of the interface card 2 Obtain the IP address of the interface card 3 Enter the interface card IP address in the address field of the Web browser of the host computer NOTE To access VM the interface card must be assigned a valid IP address The factory default setting for the IP address is DHCP NOTE If you don t know the IP dress of the interface card connect to the interface card using the serial connection You can view and change the current settings from the serial interface s Ethernet menu The Visual Manager home page is displayed showing interface card status information The home page is accessible to
152. ure 19 Network screen O il HP e1200 320 4G Interface Controller invent To change configuration settings you may click on ports and buses SSS ETHERNET CONFIGURATION SETTINGS MAIN MENU Name Actions Home System Hostname Router Ports Discovery Ethernet Mode 10 100Mbs Auto Neg Mapping IP Address Statistics Utilities Subnet Mask Report IP Gateway Reboot DHCP Enabled v ETHERNET OVERRIDE SETTINGS CAUTION If this configuration is incorrectly set processing difficulties may occur Before changing this setting evaluate the need for the change and verify the desired setting HP recommends backing up the interface card configuration to an external file before making changes to this setting Network menu options Host name to change the host name enter an alphanumeric entry of one word up to eight characters in length Select Submit Ethernet Mode the Ethernet Mode can be set to one of the following options though 10 100Mps Auto Neg is the default e 10 Mps Only 10 100Mps Auto Neg Default 100Mps half duplex Only e 100Mps full duplex Only NOTE The Ethernet physical address is assigned by DHCP by default IP Address is the IP address of the interface card Subnet mask is the IP subnet mask for the interface card IP Gateway is the IP address of the gateway for the Ethernet network connected to the interface card DHCP enables or disables support for Dy
153. use old name gt New FCP Host Old host s Port WWN High 0x210000E0 Enter desired Port WWN High lt enter gt use old Port WWN High gt Old host s Port WWN Low 0x8B02C20E Enter desired Port WWN Low lt enter gt use old Port WWN Low gt Old host s Node WWN High 0x200000E0 Enter desired Node WWN High lt enter gt use old Node WWN High gt Old host s Node WWN Low 0x8B02C20E Enter desired Node WWN Low lt enter gt use old Node WWN Low gt e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 73 Select 8 from the Device Mapping Main menu to display the entire device list Because the entire device list may not fit on one screen select N or P to go back and forth between screens displaying more maps Select X to return to the Device Mapping Main menu Figure 55 Entire device list Entire Device List X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 Prtl Port TYPE STAT Protocol Specific Information Rt Ct 1 SCSI 1 TAPE UP Target 3 Lun 0 2 2 2 SCSI 2 TAPE DOWN Target 5 Lun 0 1 1 3 scst 5 TAPE UP Target 1 Lun 0 2 2
154. uses open protocol standards that enable the forming of wide area networks WANS For each interface card to identify itself on a TCP IP network it must be uniquely identified by the following information 1 An IP address a 32 bit field composed of four octets 8 bit numbers from O through 255 Each address has decimal notation to separate octet numbers such as 208 24 132 184 Your DHCP server may allow you to set up a lease reservation for an IP address by providing the server with the Ethernet MAC address of the interface card This sets the DHCP server to always provide the same IP address to the interface card This setup can be useful for remote management of the interface card via Telnet or Visual Manager Because the method of setting up a lease reservation varies depending on the DHCP server being used it is recommended you contact your Network Administrator for assistance 2 A subnet mask This indicates how the IP address is to be read It also indicates how to separate the network identifying information from the interface card identifying information so the IP address can be interpreted correctly For example if a subnet mask of 255 255 255 0 is applied for an address 10 85 189 24 it indicates that the unique interface card address is 24 located on the 10 85 189 subnetwork 3 A default gateway This is used to specify the address for the nearest interface card that is used by the host device to forward addressed packets on to th
155. vice Display Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Issue discovery for all buses 2 Issue discovery for selected bus 3 Issue boot discovery includes resets and delays 4 Display all local devices 5 Display local devices on specified bus X Return to previous menu e Select 1 to issue discovery for all SCSI buses Select 2 to issue discovery for selected SCSI bus Select 3 to issue boot discovery includes resets and delays Select 4 to display all local SCSI devices e Select 5 to display local devices on specified SCSI bus Select 3 from the Parallel SCSI Protocol Status menu to display SCSI Resource Status e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 83 Event Log When this option is selected from the System Utilities menu the Event Log menu is displayed Figure 70 Event log menu Event Log Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 08 56 22 1 Display event log 2 Clear event log X Return to previous menu Select 1 to display the event log Select 2 to clear the event log of all old entries and start over with an empty list EY NOTE Event logging captures over 2000 events and then starts overwriting the log when full therefore the more types of events logged the faster the log rolls over and overwrites events Runtime report When this option is selected from the System Utilities menu th
156. ween devices and stub length must be adhered to Connections should also be checked and reseated if necessary Ensure that the SCSI cables are Multimode or rated for the SCSI speed of the drive SCSI Devices Verify that the SCSI devices on a particular SCSI bus can be seen in the configuration menu of the interface card Select System Utilities gt System Statistics gt Parallel SCSI Protocol Status gt Display Attached SCSI Devices gt Display ALL Local Devices If the interface card can not see the devices verify SCSI configuration cabling and termination Even if the SCSI devices are displayed they are not accessible unless the mapping mode is auto assigned or another non empty map is used Verity Fibre Channel connection If SCSI devices are recognized on the SCSI buses but do not appear to the Fibre Channel host it may be that the Fibre Channel link is not properly established Most hubs and switches have link indicators showing link status When the interface card is connected and the library is powered on this link indicator should show a good link see Operation indicators on page 10 If it does not check the cabling and connections As a means of verifying link integrity when connected to a functional host disconnecting then reconnecting the Fibre Channel cable should cause momentary activity of this indicator as the link itself reinitializes Also verify that the media type of the interface card and attached hub
157. when the interface card is powered on Contains the arithmetic and logic control and internal memory units that control the interface card For a specific SCSI bus the host clears all inputs and outputs and then resets the bus and all the devices connected to it The logical function in an N_Port responsible for supporting the exchange initiated by the originator in another N_Port A FC responder is comparable to a SCSI target The interface card is offen the responder Storage Area Network A menu item SCSI 3 interface card Commands SCC addressing is used to address SCSI devices attached to the interface card using the SCC logical unit addressing method In SCC addressing mode the interface card will respond to FCP commands as a SCC interface card device Small Computer System Interface An industry standard for connecting peripheral devices and their interface cards to an initiator A 16 bit fast wide SE or Differential or LVD or 8 bit narrow single ended physical connection between the interface card and the SCSI devices Each SCSI adapter supports up to sixteen for fast wide or eight for narrow SCSI devices including itself SCSI addressing SCSI bus SCSI device SCSI port SCSI status small formfactor pluggable SFP shortwave speed switched fabric TCP target terminator block termination topology view node name A SCSI adapter supports up to 16 devices including itself Each device has its o
158. wn unique SCSI address The SCSI address of a device dictates the device s priority when arbitrating for the SCSI bus SCSI address 7 has the highest priority The next highest priority address is 6 followed by 5 4 3 2 1 0 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 with 8 being the lowest priority address The narrow SCSI adapter is factory set to address 7 A narrow SCSI adapter supports up to eight devices including itself SCSI address 7 has the highest priority followed by 6 5 4 3 2 1 and O The means of transferring SCSI data between SCSI devices It is an 8 bit or 16 bit bus that supports up to eight or sixteen devices including itself in any mix of initiators and targets with the limitation that at least one initiator and one target must be present A single unit on the SCSI bus identifiable by a unique SCSI address A SCSI device can act as an initiator or target For SCSI 3 each SCSI device supports up to sixteen LUNs An opening at the back of the interface card providing connection between the SCSI adapter and the SCSI bus A menu name used to show the number of SCSI devices on the bus A physical component that manages the functions of the FC 0 layer which is the physical characteristic of the media and interface including drivers transceivers connectors and cables Mounts on a FC adapter card and connects the interface card to a FC host Lasers or LEDs that emit light with wavelengths around 780
159. x210000E0 Hi 0x200000E0 built at runtime Indexed Lo 0x8B02C20E Lo 0x8B02C20E PortID 0x0000EF Page 1 out of 1 pages Total Number of Hosts 1 Select Host Number 1 1 to associate host with the Current Map Enter N Next P Prev A Add D Delete E Edit X Exit gt Ef NOTE Because the entire list of hosts may not fit on one screen select N or P to see any additional pages showing the list of hosts Select X to return to the Device Mapping Main menu Select a number from the column on the left to associate a host with the current map At this point the user can edit delete or change the name for the host Adding a host Select A to add a host to the list The user is prompted to enter the desired Host Name Host ID Port WWN and Node WWN for FCP host WWN values are hexadecimal If the user doesn t know the Host ID the host won t be added to the host list Duplicate hosts won t be added to the list Figure 53 Adding a FCP host Enter desired Host Name gt Fcp Host Do you know Port ID of the Host y n gt y Enter Host ID of the host gt 0000ef Enter the new host s Port WWN High gt 210000E0 Enter the new host s Port WWN Low gt 8B02C20 El Enter the new host s Node WWN High gt 200000E0 Enter the new host s Node WWN Low gt 8B02
160. y be used when directed to do so by an authorized technician for HP Systems SCSI command tracking When this option is selected from the System Utilities menu the SCSI Command Tracking menu is displayed Figure 74 SCSI Command Tracking menu SCSI Command Tracking Menu X XX XX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 07 7 2005 15 05 45 1 Turn SCSI Command Tracking OFF 2 Display Available Hosts Devices 3 Display Command Tracking Info 4 Clear ALL Command Tracking Info X Return to previous menu Select 1 to toggle SCSI Command Tracking ON or OFF When toggled ON all SCSI commands received or transmitted to or from the interface card are logged When OFF these commands are not logged When set to ON menu options 2 through 4 are also available from this menu Select 2 to display all selected hosts and devices Select 3 to set the data to be displayed in terms of Type Device Host ALL Protocol FC SCSI Other ALL and Specific ID or ALL If ID is selected for Specific this ID can be an FC LUN Switch ID S_ID 86 Using the Command Line Interface or other ID SCSI commands which have already been tracked then that information is displayed by selecting this option Select 4 to clear the log of all previously recorded results Display trace and assertion history When this option is selected from the main menu the Trace Dump menu is displayed Trace options are set up in the Trace Settings C
161. y can be set using the lcd command ex 1cd c myCfg EY NOTE World Wide Name WWN values and Ethernet physical address MAC address values will not be saved Because user defined values for these settings are not retained in the configuration backup file they must be re entered after the configuration is restored See Configuration restore procedure later in this chapter for more information Configuration restore procedure 1 Connect the interface card to the Ethernet network used by your computer 2 Start your FTP program using the interface card s IP address ftp lt IP address gt IMPORTANT The network settings set to use DHCP need to be set to default If the IP address is not known use the serial interface to obtain the network settings See Setting up serial port communications on page 22 e1200 320 4Gb Fibre Channel Interface Card user and service guide 89 EY NOTE Ifthe interface card is to use a static IP address the pre filled in address when DHCP is disabled is 1 1 1 1 and should be changed to an address that is appropriate for the IP network it will reside on 3 Enter the user name and password The default values for user name and password are root for the user name and password for the password 4 Specify binary mode bin 5 Specify the configuration s path and filename c g file with the put command put lt path filename cfg gt The file will transfer and the interface ca

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