Cisco Systems OL-25712-04 manuel d'utilisation
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Un bon manuel d’utilisation
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Le mot vient du latin "Instructio", à savoir organiser. Ainsi, le manuel d’utilisation Cisco Systems OL-25712-04 décrit les étapes de la procédure. Le but du manuel d’utilisation est d’instruire, de faciliter le démarrage, l'utilisation de l'équipement ou l'exécution des actions spécifiques. Le manuel d’utilisation est une collection d'informations sur l'objet/service, une indice.
Malheureusement, peu d'utilisateurs prennent le temps de lire le manuel d’utilisation, et un bon manuel permet non seulement d’apprendre à connaître un certain nombre de fonctionnalités supplémentaires du dispositif acheté, mais aussi éviter la majorité des défaillances.
Donc, ce qui devrait contenir le manuel parfait?
Tout d'abord, le manuel d’utilisation Cisco Systems OL-25712-04 devrait contenir:
- informations sur les caractéristiques techniques du dispositif Cisco Systems OL-25712-04
- nom du fabricant et année de fabrication Cisco Systems OL-25712-04
- instructions d'utilisation, de réglage et d’entretien de l'équipement Cisco Systems OL-25712-04
- signes de sécurité et attestations confirmant la conformité avec les normes pertinentes
Pourquoi nous ne lisons pas les manuels d’utilisation?
Habituellement, cela est dû au manque de temps et de certitude quant à la fonctionnalité spécifique de l'équipement acheté. Malheureusement, la connexion et le démarrage Cisco Systems OL-25712-04 ne suffisent pas. Le manuel d’utilisation contient un certain nombre de lignes directrices concernant les fonctionnalités spécifiques, la sécurité, les méthodes d'entretien (même les moyens qui doivent être utilisés), les défauts possibles Cisco Systems OL-25712-04 et les moyens de résoudre des problèmes communs lors de l'utilisation. Enfin, le manuel contient les coordonnées du service Cisco Systems en l'absence de l'efficacité des solutions proposées. Actuellement, les manuels d’utilisation sous la forme d'animations intéressantes et de vidéos pédagogiques qui sont meilleurs que la brochure, sont très populaires. Ce type de manuel permet à l'utilisateur de voir toute la vidéo d'instruction sans sauter les spécifications et les descriptions techniques compliquées Cisco Systems OL-25712-04, comme c’est le cas pour la version papier.
Pourquoi lire le manuel d’utilisation?
Tout d'abord, il contient la réponse sur la structure, les possibilités du dispositif Cisco Systems OL-25712-04, l'utilisation de divers accessoires et une gamme d'informations pour profiter pleinement de toutes les fonctionnalités et commodités.
Après un achat réussi de l’équipement/dispositif, prenez un moment pour vous familiariser avec toutes les parties du manuel d'utilisation Cisco Systems OL-25712-04. À l'heure actuelle, ils sont soigneusement préparés et traduits pour qu'ils soient non seulement compréhensibles pour les utilisateurs, mais pour qu’ils remplissent leur fonction de base de l'information et d’aide.
Table des matières du manuel d’utilisation
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 First Published: September 06, 201 1 Last Modified: September 04, 2012 Americas Headquarters Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 W est T asman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA http://www .cisco.com T el: 408 526-4000 800 553-NETS (6387) Fax: 408 527-0883 T ext Part Number: OL-25712-04[...]
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THE SPECIFICA TIONS AND INFORMA TION REGARDING THE PRODUCTS IN THIS MANUAL ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL ST A TEMENTS, INFORMA TION, AND RECOMMENDA TIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BELIEVED TO BE ACCURA TE BUT ARE PRESENTED WITHOUT W ARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. USERS MUST T AKE FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR APPLICA TION OF ANY PROD[...]
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CONTENTS Preface Preface xxxiii Audience xxxiii Conventions xxxiii Related Cisco UCS Documentation xxxv Documentation Feedback xxxv Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request xxxv PART I Introduction 1 CHAPTER 1 New and Changed Information 3 New and Changed Information for this Release 3 CHAPTER 2 Overview of Cisco Unified Computing S[...]
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Boot Policy 15 Chassis Discovery Policy 16 Dynamic vNIC Connection Policy 19 Ethernet and Fibre Channel Adapter Policies 19 Global Cap Policy 20 Host Firmware Package 21 IPMI Access Profile 21 Local Disk Configuration Policy 22 Management Firmware Package 22 Management Interfaces Monitoring Policy 23 Network Control Policy 23 Power Control Policy 2[...]
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UUID Suffix Pools 32 WWN Pools 32 Management IP Pool 33 T raffic Management 33 Oversubscription 33 Oversubscription Considerations 33 Guidelines for Estimating Oversubscription 34 Pinning 35 Pinning Server T raffic to Server Ports 35 Guidelines for Pinning 36 Quality of Service 37 System Classes 37 Quality of Service Policy 38 Flow Control Policy 3[...]
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Status Bar 50 T able Customization 51 LAN Uplinks Manager 52 Internal Fabric Manager 52 Hybrid Display 53 Logging in to Cisco UCS Manager GUI through HTTPS 53 Logging in to Cisco UCS Manager GUI through HTTP 54 Logging Off Cisco UCS Manager GUI 54 W eb Session Limits 55 Setting the W eb Session Limit for Cisco UCS Manager 55 Pre-Login Banner 56 Cre[...]
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Enabling a Standalone Fabric Interconnect for Cluster Configuration 72 Ethernet Switching Mode 72 Configuring Ethernet Switching Mode 73 Fibre Channel Switching Mode 74 Configuring Fibre Channel Switching Mode 74 Changing the Properties of the Fabric Interconnects 75 Determining the Leadership Role of a Fabric Interconnect 76 CHAPTER 6 Configuring [...]
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Default Zoning 95 Enabling Default Zoning 96 Disabling Default Zoning 97 Uplink Ethernet Port Channels 97 Creating an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel 98 Enabling an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel 99 Disabling an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel 99 Adding Ports to and Removing Ports from an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel 99 Deleting an Uplink Ethernet Port Cha[...]
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Disabling a Server Port with the Internal Fabric Manager 112 CHAPTER 7 Configuring Communication Services 113 Communication Services 113 Configuring CIM-XML 114 Configuring HTTP 115 Configuring HTTPS 115 Certificates, Key Rings, and Trusted Points 115 Creating a Key Ring 116 Creating a Certificate Request for a Key Ring 117 Creating a T rusted Poin[...]
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LDAP Group Rule 134 Configuring LDAP Providers 134 Configuring Properties for LDAP Providers 134 Creating an LDAP Provider 135 Changing the LDAP Group Rule for an LDAP Provider 139 Deleting an LDAP Provider 140 LDAP Group Mapping 140 Creating an LDAP Group Map 141 Deleting an LDAP Group Map 141 Configuring RADIUS Providers 142 Configuring Propertie[...]
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Organizations in a Multi-T enancy Environment 155 Hierarchical Name Resolution in a Multi-T enancy Environment 156 Creating an Organization under the Root Organization 157 Creating an Organization under a Sub-Organization 158 Deleting an Organization 158 CHAPTER 10 Configuring Role-Based Access Control 159 Role-Based Access Control 159 User Account[...]
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Disabling a User Account 176 Clearing the Password History for a Locally Authenticated User 177 Deleting a Locally Authenticated User Account 177 Password Profile for Locally Authenticated Users 177 Configuring the Maximum Number of Password Changes for a Change Interval 179 Configuring a No Change Interval for Passwords 179 Configuring the Passwor[...]
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V erifying the Status of I/O Modules 203 V erifying the Status of Servers 203 V erifying the Status of Adapters on Servers in a Chassis 204 Downloading and Managing Firmware Packages 204 Obtaining Software Bundles from Cisco 204 Downloading Firmware Images to the Fabric Interconnect from a Remote Location 206 Downloading Firmware Images to the Fabr[...]
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Adding Firmware Packages to an Existing Service Profile 229 V erifying Firmware V ersions on Components 230 Managing the Capability Catalog 230 Capability Catalog 230 Contents of the Capability Catalog 230 Updates to the Capability Catalog 231 Activating a Capability Catalog Update 232 V erifying that the Capability Catalog Is Current 232 V iewing [...]
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CHAPTER 14 Managing Licenses 247 Licenses 247 Obtaining the Host ID for a Fabric Interconnect 248 Obtaining a License 249 Downloading Licenses to the Fabric Interconnect from the Local File System 250 Downloading Licenses to the Fabric Interconnect from a Remote Location 251 Installing a License 252 V iewing the Licenses Installed on a Fabric Inter[...]
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Disabling a Port Channel with the LAN Uplinks Manager 269 Adding Ports to a Port Channel with the LAN Uplinks Manager 269 Removing Ports from a Port Channel with the LAN Uplinks Manager 270 Deleting a Port Channel with the LAN Uplinks Manager 270 Configuring LAN Pin Groups 270 Creating a Pin Group with the LAN Uplinks Manager 270 Deleting a Pin Gro[...]
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Quality of Service 297 Configuring System Classes 297 System Classes 297 Configuring QoS System Classes 298 Enabling a QoS System Class 300 Disabling a QoS System Class 300 Configuring Quality of Service Policies 301 Quality of Service Policy 301 Creating a QoS Policy 301 Deleting a QoS Policy 303 Configuring Flow Control Policies 304 Flow Control [...]
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Configuring Cisco UCS for Upstream Disjoint L2 Networks 324 Creating a VLAN for an Upstream Disjoint L2 Network 325 Assigning Ports and Port Channels to VLANs 327 Removing Ports and Port Channels from VLANs 328 V iewing Ports and Port Channels Assigned to VLANs 329 PART IV Storage Configuration 331 CHAPTER 23 Configuring Named VSANs 333 Named VSANs[...]
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Adding a WWN Block to a WWPN Pool 351 Deleting a WWN Block from a WWPN Pool 351 Adding a WWPN Initiator to a WWPN Pool 352 Deleting a WWPN Initiator from a WWPN Pool 353 Deleting a WWPN Pool 353 CHAPTER 26 Configuring Storage-Related Policies 355 Configuring vHBA T emplates 355 vHBA T emplate 355 Creating a vHBA T emplate 355 Deleting a vHBA T empl[...]
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Configuring a Blade Server to Use a Static IP Address 374 Configuring a Blade Server to Use the Management IP Pool 374 Configuring the Management IP Address on a Rack Server 375 Configuring a Rack Server to Use a Static IP Address 375 Configuring a Rack Server to Use the Management IP Pool 376 Setting the Management IP Address on a Service Profile [...]
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Guidelines for all Local Disk Configuration Policies 407 Guidelines for Local Disk Configuration Policies Configured for RAID 408 Creating a Local Disk Configuration Policy 410 Changing a Local Disk Configuration Policy 412 Deleting a Local Disk Configuration Policy 413 Configuring Scrub Policies 413 Scrub Policy 413 Creating a Scrub Policy 414 Del[...]
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vNIC/vHBA Placement Policies 429 vCon to Adapter Placement 430 vNIC/vHBA to vCon Assignment 430 Creating a vNIC/vHBA Placement Policy 433 Deleting a vNIC/vHBA Placement Policy 434 Explicitly Assigning a vNIC to a vCon 434 Explicitly Assigning a vHBA to a vCon 435 CHAPTER 30 Configuring Server Boot 439 Boot Policy 439 Creating a Boot Policy 440 SAN [...]
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Configuring a LAN Boot for a Boot Policy 465 Local Disk Boot 465 Configuring a Local Disk Boot for a Boot Policy 466 V irtual Media Boot 466 Configuring a V irtual Media Boot for a Boot Policy 466 Deleting a Boot Policy 467 CHAPTER 31 Deferring Deployment of Service Profile Updates 469 Deferred Deployment of Service Profiles 469 Deferred Deployment[...]
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Creating Service Profiles 489 Creating a Service Profile with the Expert W izard 489 Page 1: Identifying the Service Profile 490 Page 2: Configuring the Storage Options 491 Page 3: Configuring the Networking Options 496 Page 4: Setting the vNIC/vHBA Placement 502 Page 5: Setting the Server Boot Order 504 Page 6: Adding the Maintenance Policy 507 Pa[...]
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Resetting the UUID Assigned to a Service Profile from a Pool in a Service Profile T emplate 549 Modifying the Boot Order in a Service Profile 550 Creating a vNIC for a Service Profile 553 Resetting the MAC Address Assigned to a vNIC from a Pool in a Service Profile T emplate 555 Deleting a vNIC from a Service Profile 556 Creating a vHBA for a Servi[...]
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Power Control Policy 569 Creating a Power Control Policy 569 Deleting a Power Control Policy 570 Configuring Manual Blade-Level Power Capping 570 Manual Blade-Level Power Capping 570 Setting the Blade-Level Power Cap for a Server 571 V iewing the Blade-Level Power Cap 572 PART VI System Management 573 CHAPTER 34 Managing Time Zones 575 T ime Zones [...]
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Booting a Server from the Service Profile 587 Determining the Boot Order of a Blade Server 587 Shutting Down Blade Servers 588 Shutting Down a Blade Server 588 Shutting Down a Server from the Service Profile 588 Resetting a Blade Server 589 A voiding Unexpected Server Power Changes 590 Reacknowledging a Blade Server 591 Removing a Server from a Cha[...]
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Renumbering a Rack-Mount Server 606 Removing a Non-Existent Rack-Mount Server from the Configuration Database 607 T urning the Locator LED for a Rack-Mount Server On and Of f 607 Resetting the CMOS for a Rack-Mount Server 608 Resetting the CIMC for a Rack-Mount Server 608 Recovering the Corrupt BIOS on a Rack-Mount Server 609 V iewing the POST Resu[...]
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Creating an Import Operation 626 Running an Import Operation 629 Modifying an Import Operation 630 Deleting One or More Import Operations 630 Restoring the Configuration for a Fabric Interconnect 631 CHAPTER 41 Recovering a Lost Password 633 Recovering a Lost Password 633 Password Recovery for the Admin Account 633 Determining the Leadership Role o[...]
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Support for Disk Drive Monitoring 658 Prerequisites for Disk Drive Monitoring 659 V iewing the Status of a Disk Drive 659 Interpreting the Status of a Monitored Disk Drive 660 CHAPTER 44 Configuring Statistics-Related Policies 663 Configuring Statistics Collection Policies 663 Statistics Collection Policy 663 Modifying a Statistics Collection Polic[...]
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Configuring Call Home Policies 688 Call Home Policies 688 Configuring a Call Home Policy 688 Disabling a Call Home Policy 689 Enabling a Call Home Policy 690 Deleting a Call Home Policy 690 Example: Configuring Call Home for Smart Call Home 690 Configuring Smart Call Home 690 Configuring the Default Cisco T AC-1 Profile 692 Configuring System Inven[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 xxxii OL-25712-04 Contents[...]
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Preface This preface includes the following sections: • Audience, page xxxiii • Conventions, page xxxiii • Related Cisco UCS Documentation, page xxxv • Documentation Feedback, page xxxv • Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request, page xxxv Audience This guide is intended primarily for data center administrators with respon[...]
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Indication Convention T erminal sessions and information that the system displays appear in courier font. courier font Elements in square brackets are optional. [ ] Required alternative keywords are grouped in braces and separated by vertical bars. {x | y | z} Optional alternative keywords are grouped in brackets and separated by vertical bars. [x [...]
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Related Cisco UCS Documentation Documentation Roadmaps For a complete list of all B-Series documentation, see the Cisco UCS B-Series Servers Documentation Roadmap available at the following URL: http://www .cisco.com/go/unifiedcomputing/b-series-doc . For a complete list of all C-Series documentation, see the Cisco UCS C-Series Servers Documentatio[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 xxxvi OL-25712-04 Preface Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request[...]
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P ART I Introduction • New and Changed Information, page 3 • Overview of Cisco Unified Computing System, page 9 • Overview of Cisco UCS Manager , page 43 • Overview of Cisco UCS Manager GUI, page 47[...]
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[...]
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CHAPTER 1 New and Changed Information This chapter includes the following sections: • New and Changed Information for this Release, page 3 New and Changed Information for this Release The following table provides an overview of the significant changes to this guide for this current release. The table does not provide an exhaustive list of all cha[...]
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T able 2: New Features and Significant Behavioral Changes in Cisco UCS, Release 2.0(2) Where Documented Description Feature iSCSI Boot, on page 443 Adds support for IQN pools in Cisco UCS domains configured for iSCSI boot. IQN Pools Configuring Ports and Port Channels, on page 77 Enables you to group all the physical links from a Cisco UCS V irtual[...]
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Where Documented Description Feature iSCSI Boot, on page 443 iSCSI boot enables a server to boot its operating system from an iSCSI target machine located remotely over a network. iSCSI Boot Licenses, on page 247 Updated information for new UCS hardware. Licensing Pre-Login Banner, on page 56 Displays user-defined banner text prior to login when a [...]
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Where Documented Description Feature This feature is now documented in the following installation guides: • Cisco UCS Manager Interface Car d Drivers for ESX Installation Guide • Cisco UCS Manager Interface Car d Drivers for Linux Installation Guide • Cisco UCS Manager Interface Car d Drivers for W indows Installation Guide The VIC driver ins[...]
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Where Documented Description Feature This feature is documented in the following configuration guides: • Cisco UCS Manager VM-FEX for KVM GUI Configuration Guide • Cisco UCS Manager VM-FEX for KVM CLI Configuration Guide The VM-FEX configuration guides can be found here: http:/ /www .cisco.com/en/US/ products/ps10281/products_ installation_and_[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 8 OL-25712-04 New and Changed Information for this Release[...]
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CHAPTER 2 Overview of Cisco Unified Computing System This chapter includes the following sections: • About Cisco Unified Computing System , page 9 • Unified Fabric, page 10 • Server Architecture and Connectivity , page 12 • T raffic Management, page 33 • Opt-In Features, page 38 • V irtualization in Cisco UCS , page 40 About Cisco Unifi[...]
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High Availability The management and data plane of Cisco UCS is designed for high availability and redundant access layer fabric interconnects. In addition, Cisco UCS supports existing high availability and disaster recovery solutions for the data center , such as data replication and application-level clustering technologies. Scalability A single [...]
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At the fabric interconnect, the server-facing Ethernet port receives the Ethernet and Fibre Channel traf fic. The fabric interconnect (using Ethertype to differentiate the frames) separates the two traffic types. Ethernet frames and Fibre Channel frames are switched to their respective uplink interfaces. Fibre Channel over Ethernet Cisco UCS levera[...]
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Server Architecture and Connectivity Overview of Service Profiles Service profiles are the central concept of Cisco UCS. Each service profile serves a specific purpose: ensuring that the associated server hardware has the configuration required to support the applications it will host. The service profile maintains configuration information about t[...]
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Y ou do not need to configure these hardware components directly . Server Identity Management through Service Profiles Y ou can use the network and device identities burned into the server hardware at manufacture or you can use identities that you specify in the associated service profile either directly or through identity pools, such as MAC, WWN,[...]
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such as UUID and MAC address, on the new server are overwritten with the configuration in the service profile. As a result, the change in server is transparent to your network. Y ou do not need to reconfigure any component or application on your network to begin using the new server . This profile allows you to take advantage of and manage system r[...]
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Service Profile T emplates W ith a service profile template, you can quickly create several service profiles with the same basic parameters, such as the number of vNICs and vHBAs, and with identity information drawn from the same pools. If you need only one service profile with similar values to an existing service profile, you can clone a service [...]
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• Location from which the server boots • Order in which boot devices are invoked For example, you can choose to have associated servers boot from a local device, such as a local disk or CD-ROM (VMedia), or you can select a SAN boot or a LAN (PXE) boot. Y ou must include this policy in a service profile, and that service profile must be associat[...]
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T able 4: Chassis Discovery Policy and Chassis Links Platform-Max Discovery Policy 8-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 4-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 2-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 1-Link Chassis Discovery Policy Number of Links Wired for the Chassis Chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with [...]
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Platform-Max Discovery Policy 8-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 4-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 2-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 1-Link Chassis Discovery Policy Number of Links Wired for the Chassis If the IOM has 4 links, the chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 4 links. If the IOM has 8[...]
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are grouped in a fabric port channel. If set to no group, links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are not grouped in a fabric port channel. Once a fabric port channel is created, links can be added or removed by changing the link group preference and reacknowledging the chassis, or by enabling or disabling the chassis from the port channel. T[...]
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For Fibre Channel adapter policies, the values displayed by Cisco UCS Manager may not match those displayed by applications such as QLogic SANsurfer . For example, the following values may result in an apparent mismatch between SANsurfer and Cisco UCS Manager: Note • Max LUNs Per T ar get—SANsurfer has a maximum of 256 LUNs and does not display[...]
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Host Firmware Package This policy enables you to specify a set of firmware versions that make up the host firmware package (also known as the host firmware pack). The host firmware includes the following firmware for server and adapter endpoints: • Adapter • BIOS • Board Controller • FC Adapters • HBA Option ROM • Storage Controller Y o[...]
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Local Disk Configuration Policy This policy configures any optional SAS local drives that have been installed on a server through the onboard RAID controller of the local drive. This policy enables you to set a local disk mode for all servers that are associated with a service profile that includes the local disk configuration policy . The local di[...]
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Management Interfaces Monitoring Policy This policy defines how the mgmt0 Ethernet interface on the fabric interconnect should be monitored. If Cisco UCS detects a management interface failure, a failure report is generated. If the configured number of failure reports is reached, the system assumes that the management interface is unavailable and g[...]
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default behavior directs Cisco UCS Manager to bring the remote Ethernet interface down if the associated border port fails. In this scenario, any vFibreChannel interfaces that are bound to the remote Ethernet interface are brought down as well. Cisco UCS Manager, release 1.4(2) and earlier did not enforce the Action on Uplink Fail property for thos[...]
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For more information about power supply redundancy , see Cisco UCS 5108 Server Chassis Har dwar e Installation Guide . Quality of Service Policy A quality of service (QoS) policy assigns a system class to the outgoing traf fic for a vNIC or vHBA. This system class determines the quality of service for that traffic. For certain adapters you can also[...]
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Server Inheritance Policy This policy is invoked during the server discovery process to create a service profile for the server . All service profiles created from this policy use the values burned into the blade at manufacture. The policy performs the following: • Analyzes the inventory of the server • If configured, assigns the server to the [...]
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• Server inheritance policy • Server pool policy vHBA T emplate This template is a policy that defines how a vHBA on a server connects to the SAN. It is also referred to as a vHBA SAN connectivity template. Y ou need to include this policy in a service profile for it to take effect. VM Lifecycle Policy The VM lifecycle policy determines how lon[...]
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vNIC/vHBA Placement Policies vNIC/vHBA placement policies are used to determine what types of vNICs or vHBAs can be assigned to the physical adapters on a server . Each vNIC/vHBA placement policy contains four virtual network interface connections (vCons) that are virtual representations of the physical adapters. When a vNIC/vHBA placement policy i[...]
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Flow Control Policy Flow control policies determine whether the uplink Ethernet ports in a Cisco UCS domain send and receive IEEE 802.3x pause frames when the receive buffer for a port fills. These pause frames request that the transmitting port stop sending data for a few milliseconds until the buffer clears. For flow control to work between a LAN[...]
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BIOS Settings Scrub One of the following occurs to the BIOS settings when a service profile containing the scrub policy is disassociated from a server: • If enabled, erases all BIOS settings for the server and and resets them to the BIOS defaults for that server type and vendor • If disabled, preserves the existing BIOS settings on the server S[...]
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the policy to raise an alarm if the CPU temperature exceeds a certain value, or if a server is overutilized or underutilized. These threshold policies do not control the hardware or device-level thresholds enforced by endpoints, such as the CIMC. Those thresholds are burned in to the hardware components at manufacture. Cisco UCS enables you to conf[...]
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you do not have to manually configure the MAC addresses to be used by the server associated with the service profile. In a system that implements multi-tenancy , you can use the organizational hierarchy to ensure that MAC pools can only be used by specific applications or business services. Cisco UCS Manager uses the name resolution policy to assig[...]
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Management IP Pool The management IP pool is a collection of external IP addresses. Cisco UCS Manager reserves each block of IP addresses in the management IP pool for external access that terminates in the CIMC on a server . Y ou can configure service profiles and service profile templates to use IP addresses from the management IP pool. Y ou cann[...]
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For the 6200 series fabric interconnects running Cisco UCS Manager, version 2.0 and higher , Ethernet uplink ports and Fibre Channel uplink ports are both configurable on the base module, as well as on the expansion module. For example, if you have two Cisco UCS 5100 series chassis that are fully populated with half width Cisco UCS B200-M1 servers,[...]
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Network T ype The network type is only relevant to traf fic on uplink ports, because FCoE does not exist outside Cisco UCS. The rest of the data center network only dif ferentiates between LAN and SAN traf fic. Therefore, you do not need to take the network type into consideration when you estimate oversubscription of a fabric interconnect port. Pi[...]
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Link 8 Link 7 Link 6 Link 5 Link 4 Link 3 Link 2 Link 1 / Fabric Port Channel Links on Chassis None None None None None None Server slots 2, 4, 6, and 8 Server slots 1, 3, 5, and 7 2 links None None None None Server slots 4 and 8 Server slots 3 and 7 Server slots 2 and 6 Server slots 1 and 5 4 links Server slot 8 Server slot 7 Server slot 6 Server [...]
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Quality of Service Cisco UCS provides the following methods to implement quality of service: • System classes that specify the global configuration for certain types of traffic across the entire system • QoS policies that assign system classes for individual vNICs • Flow control policies that determine how uplink Ethernet ports handle pause f[...]
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Quality of Service Policy A quality of service (QoS) policy assigns a system class to the outgoing traf fic for a vNIC or vHBA. This system class determines the quality of service for that traffic. For certain adapters you can also specify additional controls on the outgoing traffic, such as burst and rate. Y ou must include a QoS policy in a vNIC [...]
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• MAC address (used for LAN connectivity) • W orld Wide Names (used for SAN connectivity) • Boot settings Stateless computing creates a dynamic server environment with highly flexible servers. Every physical server in a Cisco UCS domain remains anonymous until you associate a service profile with it, then the server gets the identity configur[...]
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access any policies in the Finance or ganization. However , both Finance and HR can use policies and pools in the root organization. If you create organizations in a multi-tenant environment, you can also set up one or more of the following for each organization or for a sub-organization in the same hierarchy: • Resource pools • Policies • Se[...]
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Overview of Cisco Virtual Machine Fabric Extender A virtualized server implementation consists of one or more VMs running as 'guests' on a single physical server . The guest VMs are hosted and managed by a software layer called the hypervisor or virtual machine manager (VMM). The hypervisor typically presents a virtual network interface t[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 42 OL-25712-04 Virtualization in Cisco UCS[...]
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CHAPTER 3 Overview of Cisco UCS Manager This chapter includes the following sections: • About Cisco UCS Manager , page 43 • T asks Y ou Can Perform in Cisco UCS Manager , page 44 • T asks Y ou Cannot Perform in Cisco UCS Manager , page 46 • Cisco UCS Manager in a High A vailability Environment, page 46 About Cisco UCS Manager Cisco UCS Mana[...]
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Centralized Management Cisco UCS Manager centralizes the management of resources and devices, rather than using multiple management points. This centralized management includes management of the following devices in a Cisco UCS domain: • Fabric interconnects. • Software switches for virtual servers. • Power and environmental management for ch[...]
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• Ports • Interface cards • I/O modules Cisco UCS Resource Management Y ou can use Cisco UCS Manager to create and manage all resources within a Cisco UCS domain, including the following: • Servers • WWN addresses • MAC addresses • UUIDs • Bandwidth Server Administration A server administrator can use Cisco UCS Manager to perform se[...]
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• Create the pools and policies related to the network configuration, such as WWN pools and Fibre Channel adapter profiles T asks Y ou Cannot Perform in Cisco UCS Manager Y ou cannot use Cisco UCS Manager to perform certain system management tasks that are not specifically related to device management within a Cisco UCS domain. No Cross-System Ma[...]
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CHAPTER 4 Overview of Cisco UCS Manager GUI This chapter includes the following sections: • Overview of Cisco UCS Manager GUI , page 47 • Logging in to Cisco UCS Manager GUI through HTTPS, page 53 • Logging in to Cisco UCS Manager GUI through HTTP , page 54 • Logging Off Cisco UCS Manager GUI , page 54 • W eb Session Limits, page 55 • P[...]
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Fault Summary Area The Fault Summary area displays in the upper left of Cisco UCS Manager GUI. This area displays a summary of all faults that have occurred in the Cisco UCS domain. Each type of fault is represented by a different icon. The number below each icon indicates how many faults of that type have occurred in the system. If you click an ic[...]
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The major nodes below the Equipment node in this tab are the following: • Chassis • Fabric Interconnects Servers T ab This tab contains the server-related components, such as service profiles, polices, and pools. A server administrator typically accesses and manages the components on this tab. The major nodes below the Servers node in this tab [...]
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Admin T ab This tab contains system-wide settings, such as user manager and communication services, and troubleshooting components, such as faults and events. The system administrator typically accesses and manages the components on this tab. The major nodes below the All node in this tab are the following: • Faults, Events and Audit Log • User[...]
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On the left, the status bar displays the following information about your current session in Cisco UCS Manager GUI: • A lock icon that indicates the protocol you used to log in. If the icon is locked, you connected with HTTPS and if the icon is unlocked, you connected with HTTP . • The username you used to log in. • The IP address of the serv[...]
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Description Name The criteria you enter can include one of the following wildcards: • _ (underscore) or ? (question mark)—replaces a single character • % (percent sign) or * (asterisk)—replaces any sequence of characters Wildcard option Displays only that content in the column which is less than the value specified. Less Than option Display[...]
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Hybrid Display For each chassis in a Cisco UCS domain, Cisco UCS Manager GUI provides a hybrid display that includes both physical components and connections between the chassis and the fabric interconnects. This tab displays detailed information about the connections between the selected chassis and the fabric interconnects. It has an icon for the[...]
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a) (Optional) Check the check box to accept all content from Cisco. b) Click Y es to accept the certificate and continue. Step 6 In the Login dialog box, do the following: a) Enter your username and password. b) If your Cisco UCS implementation includes multiple domains, select the appropriate domain from the Domain drop-down list. c) Click Login .[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI blurs on your screen to indicate that you cannot use it and displays the Exit dialog box. Step 2 From the drop-down list, select one of the following: • Exit to log out and shut down Cisco UCS Manager GUI. • Log Off to log out of Cisco UCS Manager GUI and log in a different user . Step 3 Click OK . W eb Session Limits W eb[...]
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Pre-Login Banner W ith a pre-login banner , when a user logs into Cisco UCS Manager GUI, Cisco UCS Manager displays the banner text in the Create Pr e-Login Banner dialog box and waits until the user dismisses that dialog box before it prompts for the username and password. When a user logs into Cisco UCS Manager CLI, Cisco UCS Manager displays the[...]
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Deleting the Pre-Login Banner Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management . Step 3 Click the User Services node. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the Banners tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Delete . Step 6 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box[...]
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Description Name The amount of Java message logging done for Cisco UCS Manager GUI on the user's local machine. This can be one of the following: • All —All relevant Java information for the GUI is logged. There can be a maximum of 10 log files, each of which can be a maximum of 10 MB in size. Once the final file has been filled, Cisco UCS[...]
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Description Name If checked, Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation when operations are successful. Confirm Successful Operations check box Step 4 Click OK . Configuring Properties for External Applications Cisco UCS Manager GUI uses these properties to connect with external applications, such as SSH. Procedure Step 1 In the toolbar , click [...]
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Description Name The number of tabs the system should store in memory for use with the Forward and Back toolbar buttons. Max History Size field If checked, all labels are right-aligned with respect to one another . Otherwise all labels are left-aligned. Right Aligned Labels check box If checked, when you drag an object from one place to another , t[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the policy whose usage you want to view . Step 2 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 3 In the Actions area, click Show Policy Usage . Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the Service Profiles/T emplates dialog box that shows the associated service profiles and service profile templates. Determinin[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 62 OL-25712-04 Copying the XML[...]
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P ART II System Configuration • Configuring the Fabric Interconnects, page 65 • Configuring Ports and Port Channels, page 77 • Configuring Communication Services, page 113 • Configuring Authentication, page 131 • Configuring Organizations, page 155 • Configuring Role-Based Access Control, page 159 • Managing Firmware, page 183 • Con[...]
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CHAPTER 5 Configuring the Fabric Interconnects This chapter includes the following sections: • Initial System Setup, page 65 • Performing an Initial System Setup for a Standalone Configuration, page 67 • Initial System Setup for a Cluster Configuration, page 69 • Enabling a Standalone Fabric Interconnect for Cluster Configuration, page 72 ?[...]
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• Default domain name Setup Mode Y ou can choose to either restore the system configuration from an existing backup file, or manually set up the system by going through the Setup wizard. If you choose to restore the system, the backup file must be reachable from the management network. System Configuration T ype Y ou can configure a Cisco UCS dom[...]
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Performing an Initial System Setup for a Standalone Configuration Before Y ou Begin 1 V erify the following physical connections on the fabric interconnect: • The console port is physically connected to a computer terminal or console server • The management Ethernet port (mgmt0) is connected to an external hub, switch, or router For more inform[...]
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Step 5 Copy the web link from the prompt into a supported web browser and go to the Cisco UCS Manager GUI launch page. Step 6 On the Cisco UCS Manager GUI launch page, select Express Setup . Step 7 On the Express Setup page, select Initial Setup and click Submit . Step 8 In the Cluster and Fabric Setup Area, select the Standalone Mode option. Step [...]
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Initial System Setup for a Cluster Configuration Performing an Initial System Setup on the First Fabric Interconnect Before Y ou Begin 1 V erify the following physical connections on the fabric interconnect: • A console port on the first fabric interconnect is physically connected to a computer terminal or console server • The management Ethern[...]
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Y ou will see the power on self-test messages as the fabric interconnect boots. Step 3 At the installation method prompt, enter gui. Step 4 If the system cannot access a DHCP server , you are prompted to enter the following information: • IP address for the management port on the fabric interconnect • Subnet mask for the management port on the [...]
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Description Field The name of the domain in which the fabric interconnect resides. Domain Name field Step 10 Click Submit . A page displays the results of your setup operation. Performing an Initial System Setup on the Second Fabric Interconnect Before Y ou Begin Y ou must ensure the following: • A console port on the second fabric interconnect i[...]
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A page displays the results of your setup operation. Enabling a Standalone Fabric Interconnect for Cluster Configuration Y ou can add a second fabric interconnect to an existing Cisco UCS domain that uses a single standalone fabric interconnect. T o do this, you must enable the standalone fabric interconnect for cluster operation by configuring it [...]
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denying egress server traffic on more than one uplink port at a time. End-host mode is the default Ethernet switching mode and should be used if either of the following are used upstream: • Layer 2 switching for L2 aggregation • V irtual Switching System (VSS) aggregation layer When end-host mode is enabled, if a vNIC is hard pinned to an uplin[...]
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The link for the current mode is dimmed. Step 5 In the dialog box, click Y es . Cisco UCS Manager restarts the fabric interconnect, logs you out, and disconnects Cisco UCS Manager GUI. Fibre Channel Switching Mode The Fibre Channel switching mode determines how the fabric interconnect behaves as a switching device between the servers and storage de[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 4 In the Actions area of the General tab, click one of the following links: • Set Fibre Channel Switching Mode • Set Fibre[...]
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Description Name The associated gateway . Default Gateway field Step 8 Click OK . Step 9 Log out of Cisco UCS Manager GUI and log back in again to see your changes. Determining the Leadership Role of a Fabric Interconnect Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 In the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Inte[...]
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CHAPTER 6 Configuring Ports and Port Channels This chapter includes the following sections: • Server and Uplink Ports on the 6100 Series Fabric Interconnect, page 77 • Unified Ports on the 6200 Series Fabric Interconnect, page 78 • Server Ports, page 85 • Uplink Ethernet Ports, page 85 • Reconfiguring a Port on a Fabric Interconnect, page[...]
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Ports on the 6100 series fabric interconnect are not unified. For more information on Unified Ports, see Unified Ports on the 6200 Series Fabric Interconnect . Note Each fabric interconnect can include the following port types: Server Ports Server ports handle data traffic between the fabric interconnect and the adapter cards on the servers. Y ou c[...]
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Changing the port mode results in the existing port configuration being deleted and replaced by a new logical port. Any objects associated with that port configuration, such as VLANs and VSANS, are removed. There is no restriction on the number of times the port mode can be changed for a unified port. Port T ypes The port type defines the type of t[...]
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Beacon LEDs for Unified Ports Each port on the 6200 series fabric interconnect has a corresponding beacon LED. When the Beacon LED property is configured, the beacon LEDs illuminate, showing you which ports are configured in a given port mode. The Beacon LED property can be configured to show you which ports are grouped in one port mode: either Eth[...]
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The total number of uplink Ethernet ports and uplink Ethernet port channel members that can be configured on each fabric interconnect is limited to 31. This limitation includes uplink Ethernet ports and uplink Ethernet port channel members configured on the expansion module. Note Effect of Port Mode Changes on Data T raffic Port mode changes can ca[...]
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Configuring Port Modes for a 6248 Fabric Interconnect Changing the port mode on either module can cause an interruption in data traffic because changes to the fixed module require a reboot of the fabric interconnect and changes on an expansion module require a reboot of that module. If the Cisco UCS domain has a cluster configuration that is set up[...]
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What to Do Next Configure the port types for the ports. Y ou can right-click on any port in the module display above the slider and configure that port for an available port type. Configuring Port Modes for a 6296 Fabric Interconnect Changing the port mode on either module can cause an interruption in data traffic because changes to the fixed modul[...]
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• Click Next to configure the port mode for ports in expansion module 2. • If you do not wish to configure the port mode for ports on the remaining expansion modules, continue with Step 9. If you change the port mode for a previously configured port, the port returns to an unconfigured state. Step 8 If you need to configure port modes for expan[...]
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Server Ports Configuring Server Ports Y ou can only configure server ports on the fixed port module. Expansion modules do not include server ports. This task describes only one method of configuring ports. Y ou can also configure ports from a right-click menu, from the General tab for the port, or in the LAN Uplinks Manager . Procedure Step 1 In th[...]
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The port or ports are configured as uplink Ethernet ports, removed from the list of unconfigured ports, and added to the Uplink Ethernet Ports node. What to Do Next If desired, change the properties for the default flow control policy and admin speed of the uplink Ethernet port. Changing the Properties of an Uplink Ethernet Port Procedure Step 1 In[...]
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Fixed Module • • Expansion Module Step 4 Click the port or ports you want to reconfigure. Step 5 Drag the selected port or ports and drop them in the appropriate node. The port or ports are reconfigured as the appropriate type of port, removed from the original node, and added to the new node. Example: Reconfiguring an Uplink Ethernet Port as a[...]
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The port or ports are enabled. Data traf fic can begin to travel through them. Disabling a Port on a Fabric Interconnect After you enable or disable a port on a fabric interconnect, wait for at least 1 minute before you reacknowledge the chassis. If you reacknowledge the chassis too soon, the pinning of server traffic from the chassis may not be up[...]
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Unconfiguring a Port on a Fabric Interconnect Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 Depending upon the location of the ports you want to unconfigure, expand one of the following: • Fixed Module • Expansion M[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 Depending upon the location of the ports you want to configure, expand one of the following: • Fixed Module • Expansion Module Step 4 Click one or more of the ports unde[...]
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Description Name The data transfer rate for the port, which should match the destination to which the port is linked. This can be one of the following: • 1 Gbps • 10 Gbps • 20 Gbps • 40 Gbps The admin speed can be changed only for certain ports, and not all speeds are available on all systems. For more information, see the Har dwar e Instal[...]
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Description Name The MAC address for the endpoint. MAC Address field Step 10 Click OK . The port or ports are configured as Appliance ports, removed from the list of unconfigured ports, and added to the Appliance Ports node. Modifying the Properties of an Appliance Port Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the[...]
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Description Name The data transfer rate for the port, which should match the destination to which the port is linked. This can be one of the following: • 1 Gbps • 10 Gbps • 20 Gbps • 40 Gbps The admin speed can be changed only for certain ports, and not all speeds are available on all systems. For more information, see the Har dwar e Instal[...]
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Step 9 Click OK . FCoE and Fibre Channel Storage Ports Configuring an FCoE Storage Port Y ou can configure FCoE storage ports on either the fixed module or an expansion module. This task describes only one method of configuring FCoE storage ports. Y ou can also configure FCoE storage ports from the General tab for the port. Before Y ou Begin The Fi[...]
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Before Y ou Begin The Fibre Channel switching mode must be set to Switching for these ports to be valid. The storage ports cannot function in end-host mode. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 Expand the Expan[...]
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zoning option in Cisco UCS Manager is whether the default zone in a VSAN (nodes not assigned to any zone) permits or denies access among its members. When default zoning is enabled , all traffic is permitted among members of the default zone. When default zoning is disabled , all traffic is denied among members of the default zone. Default zoning i[...]
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Disabling Default Zoning Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 In the SAN tab, click the SAN node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the VSANs tab. Step 4 Click one of the following subtabs, depending upon the type of VSAN for which you want to disable default zoning: Description Subtab Displays all VSANs in the Cisco UCS[...]
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Creating an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > LAN Cloud . Step 3 Expand the node for the fabric interconnect where you want to add the port channel. Step 4 Right-click the Port Channels node and choose Create Port Channel . Step 5 In the Set Port Channel N[...]
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Enabling an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > LAN Cloud . Step 3 Expand the node for the fabric interconnect that includes the port channel you want to enable. Step 4 Expand the Port Channels node. Step 5 Right-click the port channel you want to enable and[...]
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• T o remove ports, choose one or more ports in the Ports in the port channel table, and then click the << button to remove the ports from the port channel and add them to the Ports table. Step 7 Click OK . Deleting an Uplink Ethernet Port Channel Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN [...]
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Description Name A user-defined name for the port channel. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field The quality of service setting associated[...]
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Description Name Check the check box in this column for each VLAN you want to use. Select column The name of the VLAN. Name column T o designate one of the VLANs as the native VLAN, click the radio button in this column. Native VLAN column c) If you clicked the access radio button, choose a VLAN from the Select VLAN drop-down list. Step 7 (Optional[...]
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Enabling an Appliance Port Channel Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > Appliances . Step 3 Expand the node for the fabric interconnect that includes the port channel you want to enable. Step 4 Expand the Port Channels node. Step 5 Right-click the port channel you want to enable and choo[...]
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• T o remove ports, choose one or more ports in the Ports in the port channel table, and then click the << button to remove the ports from the port channel and add them to the Ports table. Step 7 Click OK . Deleting an Appliance Port Channel Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > A[...]
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Description Name The identifier for the port channel. Enter an integer between 1 and 256. This ID cannot be changed after the port channel has been saved. ID field A user-defined name for the port channel. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore[...]
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Disabling a Fibre Channel Port Channel Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > SAN Cloud > Fabric > FC Port Channels . Step 3 Click the port channel you want to disable. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Disable Port Channel . Step 6 If[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > SAN Cloud > Fabric > FC Port Channels . Step 3 Click the port channel that you want to modify . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, change the values in one or more of the following fields: Description Na[...]
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Adapter Port Channels An adapter port channel groups all the physical links from a Cisco UCS V irtual Interface Card (VIC) to an IOM into one logical link. Adapter port channels are created and managed internally by Cisco UCS Manager when it detects that the correct hardware is present. Adapter port channels cannot be configured manually . Adapter [...]
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Cabling Considerations for Fabric Port Channels When you configure the links between the Cisco UCS 2200 Series IOM and a Cisco UCS 6200 series fabric interconnect in fabric port channel mode, the available VIF namespace on the adapter varies depending on where the IOM uplinks are connected to the fabric interconnect ports. Inside the 6248 fabric in[...]
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What to Do Next T o add or remove chassis links from a fabric port channel after making a change to the chassis discovery policy or the chassis connectivity policy , reacknowledge the chassis. Chassis reacknowledgement is not required to enable or disable chassis member ports from a fabric port channel Viewing Fabric Port Channels Procedure Step 1 [...]
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Configuring Server Ports with the Internal Fabric Manager Internal Fabric Manager The Internal Fabric Manager provides a single interface where you can configure server ports for a fabric interconnect in a Cisco UCS domain. The Internal Fabric Manager is accessible from the General tab for that fabric interconnect. Some of the configuration that yo[...]
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Unconfiguring a Server Port with the Internal Fabric Manager Procedure Step 1 In the Internal Fabric Manager , click the server port in the Server Ports table. Step 2 Click Unconfigure Port . Step 3 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Step 4 If you have completed all tasks in the Internal Fabric Manager , c[...]
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CHAPTER 7 Configuring Communication Services This chapter includes the following sections: • Communication Services, page 113 • Configuring CIM-XML, page 114 • Configuring HTTP , page 115 • Configuring HTTPS, page 115 • Configuring SNMP , page 121 • Enabling T elnet, page 129 • Disabling Communication Services, page 129 Communication [...]
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Description Communication Service This service is enabled on port 80 by default. Y ou must enable either HTTP or HTTPS to run Cisco UCS Manager GUI. If you select HTTP , all data is exchanged in clear text mode. For security purposes, we recommend that you enable HTTPS and disable HTTP . By default, Cisco UCS redirects any attempt to communicate vi[...]
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The CIM-XML area expands to display the available configuration options. Step 5 (Optional) In the Port field, change the default port that Cisco UCS Manager GUI will use for CIM-XML. The default port is 5988. Step 6 Click Save Changes . Configuring HTTP Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand Al[...]
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to 2048 bits. In general, a longer key is more secure than a shorter key . Cisco UCS Manager provides a default key ring with an initial 1024-bit key pair , and allows you to create additional key rings. The default key ring certificate must be manually regenerated if the cluster name changes or the certificate expires. This operation is only avail[...]
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c) Click OK . What to Do Next Create a certificate request for this key ring. Creating a Certificate Request for a Key Ring Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Key Management . Step 3 Click the key ring for which you want to create a certificate request. Step 4 In the W ork pane, cl[...]
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Description Name The organizational unit. Enter up to 64 characters. Y ou can use any letters, numbers, or spaces, as well as the following special characters: , (comma), . (period), @ (at sign), ^ (carat), ( (open parenthesis), ) (close parenthesis), - (dash), _ (underscore), + (plus sign), : (colon), / (forward slash). Organization Unit Name fiel[...]
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Description Name The certificate information for this trusted point. The certificate must be in Base64 encoded X.509 (CER) format. Important Certificate Chain field Step 5 Click OK . What to Do Next When you receive the certificate from the trust anchor or certificate authority , import it into the key ring. Importing a Certificate into a Key Ring [...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Communication Services . Step 3 Select the Communication Services tab. Step 4 In the HTTPS area, click the enabled radio button. The HTTPS area expands to display the available configuration options. Step 5 Complete t[...]
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Step 6 Click Save Changes . Deleting a Key Ring Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Key Management . Step 3 Right-click the key ring you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 4 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Deleting a T rusted Point [...]
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• An SNMP manager—The system used to control and monitor the activities of network devices using SNMP . • An SNMP agent—The software component within Cisco UCS, the managed device, that maintains the data for Cisco UCS and reports the data, as needed, to the SNMP manager . Cisco UCS includes the agent and a collection of MIBs. T o enable th[...]
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• noAuthNoPriv—No authentication or encryption • authNoPriv—Authentication but no encryption • authPriv—Authentication and encryption SNMPv3 provides for both security models and security levels. A security model is an authentication strategy that is set up for a user and the role in which the user resides. A security level is the permi[...]
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What Happens Encryption Authentication Level Model Provides authentication based on the HMAC-MD5 or HMAC-SHA algorithms. Provides Data Encryption Standard (DES) 56-bit encryption in addition to authentication based on the Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) DES (DES-56) standard. DES HMAC-MD5 or HMAC-SHA authPriv v3 SNMPv3 Security Features SNMPv3 provides[...]
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AES Privacy Protocol for SNMPv3 Users Cisco UCS uses Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) as one of the privacy protocols for SNMPv3 message encryption and conforms with RFC 3826. The privacy password, or priv option, of fers a choice of DES or 128-bit AES encryption for SNMP security encryption. If you enable AES-128 configuration and include a priv[...]
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Description Name The location of the host on which the SNMP agent (server) runs. Enter an alphanumeric string up to 510 characters. System Location field Step 5 Click Save Changes . What to Do Next Create SNMP traps and users. Creating an SNMP T rap Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All &g[...]
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Description Name If you select V2c or V3 for the version, the type of trap to send. This can be one of the following: • T raps • Informs T ype field If you select V3 for the version, the privilege associated with the trap. This can be one of the following: • Auth —Authentication but no encryption • Noauth —No authentication or encryptio[...]
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Creating an SNMPv3 user Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Communication Services . Step 3 Select the Communication Services tab. Step 4 In the SNMP Users area, click + . Step 5 In the Create SNMP User dialog box, complete the following fields: Descrip[...]
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Deleting an SNMPv3 User Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Communication Services . Step 3 Select the Communication Services tab. Step 4 In the SNMP Users area, click the row in the table that corresponds to the user you want to delete. Step 5 Click th[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 130 OL-25712-04 Disabling Communication Services[...]
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CHAPTER 8 Configuring Authentication This chapter includes the following sections: • Authentication Services, page 131 • Guidelines and Recommendations for Remote Authentication Providers, page 131 • User Attributes in Remote Authentication Providers, page 132 • LDAP Group Rule, page 134 • Configuring LDAP Providers, page 134 • Configur[...]
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User Accounts in Remote Authentication Services User accounts can exist locally in Cisco UCS Manager or in the remote authentication server . The temporary sessions for users who log in through remote authentication services can be viewed through Cisco UCS Manager GUI or Cisco UCS Manager CLI. User Roles in Remote Authentication Services If you cre[...]
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Attribute ID Requirements Schema Extension Custom Attribute Authentication Provider The vendor ID for the Cisco RADIUS implementation is 009 and the vendor ID for the attribute is 001. The following syntax example shows how to specify multiples user roles and locales if you choose to create the cisco-avpair attribute: shell:roles="admin,aaa&qu[...]
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lDAPDisplayName: CiscoAVPair name: CiscoAVPair objectCategory: CN=Attribute-Schema,CN=Schema,CN=Configuration,CN=X LDAP Group Rule The LDAP group rule is used to determine whether Cisco UCS should use LDAP groups when assigning user roles and locales to a remote user . Configuring LDAP Providers Configuring Properties for LDAP Providers The propert[...]
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Description Name The specific distinguished name in the LDAP hierarchy where the server should begin a search when a remote user logs in and the system attempts to get the user's DN based on their username. The maximum supported string length is 127 characters. This property is required. If you do not specify a base DN on this tab then you mus[...]
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• If you want to use secure communications, create a trusted point containing the certificate of the root certificate authority (CA) of the LDAP server in Cisco UCS Manager. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > LDAP . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the General[...]
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Description Name The LDAP search is restricted to those usernames that match the defined filter . This value is required unless a default filter has been set on the LDAP General tab. Filter field An LDAP attribute that stores the values for the user roles and locales. This property is always a name-value pair . The system queries the user record fo[...]
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Description Name Whether Cisco UCS also searches LDAP groups when authenticating and assigning user roles and locales to remote users. This can be one of the following: • Disable —Cisco UCS does not access any LDAP groups. • Enable —Cisco UCS searches all LDAP groups mapped in this Cisco UCS domain. If the remote user is found, Cisco UCS as[...]
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Changing the LDAP Group Rule for an LDAP Provider Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > LDAP . Step 3 Expand LDAP Providers and choose the LDAP provider for which you want to change the group rule. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the LDA[...]
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Step 6 Click Save Changes . Deleting an LDAP Provider Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > LDAP . Step 3 Expand LDAP Providers . Step 4 Right-click the LDAP provider you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmatio[...]
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Creating an LDAP Group Map Before Y ou Begin • Create an LDAP group in the LDAP server . • Configure the distinguished name for the LDAP group in the LDAP server . • Create locales in Cisco UCS Manager (optional). • Create custom roles in Cisco UCS Manager (optional). Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On t[...]
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Configuring RADIUS Providers Configuring Properties for RADIUS Providers The properties that you configure in this task are the default settings for all provider connections of this type defined in Cisco UCS Manager. If an individual provider includes a setting for any of these properties, Cisco UCS uses that setting and ignores the default setting[...]
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The following syntax example shows how to specify multiples user roles and locales if you choose to create the cisco-avpair attribute: shell:roles="admin,aaa" shell:locales="L1,abc" . Use a comma "," as the delimiter to separate multiple values. • For a cluster configuration, add the management port IP addresses for [...]
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b) Click OK . Step 4 Click Save Changes . What to Do Next For implementations involving a single RADIUS database, select RADIUS as the primary authentication service. For implementations involving multiple RADIUS databases, configure a RADIUS provider group. Deleting a RADIUS Provider Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. St[...]
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What to Do Next Create an T ACACS+ provider . Creating a T ACACS+ Provider Cisco UCS Manager supports a maximum of 16 T ACACS+ providers. Before Y ou Begin Perform the following configuration in the T ACACS+ server: • Create the cisco-av-pair attribute. Y ou cannot use an existing T ACACS+ attribute. The cisco-av-pair name is the string that prov[...]
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Description Name The port through which Cisco UCS should communicate with the T ACACS+ database. Enter an integer between 1 and 65535. The default port is 49. Port field The length of time in seconds the system should spend trying to contact the T ACACS+ database before it times out. Enter an integer from 1 to 60 seconds, or enter 0 (zero) to use t[...]
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Provider Groups A provider group is a set of providers that will be used by Cisco UCS during the authentication process. Cisco UCS Manager allows you to create a maximum of 16 provider groups, with a maximum of eight providers allowed per group. During authentication, all the providers within a provider group are tried in order . If all of the conf[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > LDAP . Step 3 Expand LDAP Provider Gr oups . Step 4 Right-click the LDAP provider group you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Creating a RAD[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > RADIUS . Step 3 Expand RADIUS Provider Gr oups . Step 4 Right-click the RADIUS provider group you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Creating[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > T ACACS+ . Step 3 Expand T ACACS+ Provider Gr oups . Step 4 Right-click the T ACACS+ provider group you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Au[...]
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Description Name When a web client connects to Cisco UCS Manager, the client needs to send refresh requests to Cisco UCS Manager to keep the web session active. This option specifies the maximum amount of time allowed between refresh requests for a user in this domain. If this time limit is exceeded, Cisco UCS Manager considers the web session to b[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > Authentication . Step 3 Click Native Authentication . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Console Authentication area, complete the following fields: Description Name The method by which a user loggi[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > Authentication . Step 3 Click Native Authentication . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Default Authentication area, complete the following fields: Description Name The default method by which a us[...]
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assign-default-role Does not restrict user access to Cisco UCS Manager based on user roles. Read-only access is granted to all users unless other user roles have been defined in Cisco UCS Manager. This is the default behavior . no-login Restricts user access to Cisco UCS Manager based on user roles. If user roles have not been assigned for the remo[...]
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CHAPTER 9 Configuring Organizations This chapter includes the following sections: • Organizations in a Multi-T enancy Environment, page 155 • Hierarchical Name Resolution in a Multi-T enancy Environment, page 156 • Creating an Organization under the Root Organization, page 157 • Creating an Organization under a Sub-Organization, page 158 ?[...]
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• Service profile templates The root organization is always the top level organization. Hierarchical Name Resolution in a Multi-T enancy Environment In a multi-tenant environment, Cisco UCS uses the hierarchy of an organization to resolve the names of policies and resource pools. When Cisco UCS Manager searches for details of a policy or a resour[...]
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5 If the default server pool in the root organization has an available server , Cisco UCS Manager associates that server with the service profile and discontinues the search. If the default pool does not have an available server , Cisco UCS Manager returns an allocation error . Example: Server Pool Name Resolution in a Multi-Level Hierarchy In this[...]
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This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Step 3 In the Description field, enter a description for the organization. Step 4 Click OK . Creating an Organi[...]
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CHAPTER 10 Configuring Role-Based Access Control This chapter includes the following sections: • Role-Based Access Control, page 159 • User Accounts for Cisco UCS Manager , page 159 • User Roles, page 162 • User Locales, page 166 • Configuring User Roles, page 167 • Configuring Locales, page 169 • Configuring Locally Authenticated Use[...]
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A user account can be set with a SSH public key . The public key can be set in either of the two formats: OpenSSH and SECSH. Admin Account Each Cisco UCS domain has an admin account. The admin account is a default user account and cannot be modified or deleted. This account is the system administrator or superuser account and has full privileges. T[...]
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• The unique username for each user account cannot be all-numeric. Y ou cannot create a local user with an all-numeric username. • The unique username must start with an alphabetic character . It cannot start with a number or a special character , such as an underscore. After you create a user account, you cannot change the username. Y ou must [...]
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• debug Guidelines for Cisco UCS Manager Passwords A password is required for each locally authenticated user account. A user with admin or aaa privileges can configure Cisco UCS Manager to perform a password strength check on user passwords. If the password strength check is enabled, each user must have a strong password. Cisco recommends that e[...]
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Roles can be created, modified to add new or remove existing privileges, or deleted. When a role is modified, the new privileges are applied to all users assigned to that role. Privilege assignment is not restricted to the privileges defined for the default roles. That is, you can use a custom set of privileges to create a unique role. For example,[...]
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Server Profile Administrator Read-and-write access to logical server related operations. Read access to the rest of the system. Server Security Administrator Read-and-write access to server security related operations. Read access to the rest of the system. Storage Administrator Read-and-write access to storage operations. Read access to the rest o[...]
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Default Role Assignment Description Privilege Storage Administrator External SAN security ext-san-security Operations Alarms and alarm policies fault Operations Logs and Smart Call Home operations Network Administrator Pod configuration pod-config Network Administrator Pod policy pod-policy Network Administrator Pod QoS pod-qos Network Administrato[...]
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Default Role Assignment Description Privilege Server Profile Administrator Service profile server management service-profile-server Server Profile Administrator Service profile consumer service-profile-server-oper Server Security Administrator Service profile pool policy service-profile-server-policy Storage Administrator Service profile storage se[...]
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Configuring User Roles Creating a User Role Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services . Step 3 Right-click User Services and choose Create Role . Y ou can also right-click Roles to access that option. Step 4 In the Create Role dialog box, complete the fo[...]
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Adding Privileges to a User Role Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services . Step 3 Expand the Roles node. Step 4 Choose the role to which you want to add privileges. Step 5 In the General tab, check the boxes for the privileges you want to add to the ro[...]
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Configuring Locales Creating a Locale Before Y ou Begin One or more organizations must exist before you create a locale. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services . Step 3 Right-click Locales and choose Create a Locale . Step 4 In the Create Locale page,[...]
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Assigning an Organization to a Locale Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services . Step 3 Expand the Locales node and click the locale to which you want to add an or ganization. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Organizations [...]
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Deleting a Locale Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services . Step 3 Expand the Locales node. Step 4 Right-click the locale you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Config[...]
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Description Name The account name that is used when logging into this account. This account must be unique and meet the guidelines and restrictions for Cisco UCS Manager user accounts. • The login ID can contain between 1 and 32 characters, including the following: ◦ Any alphabetic character ◦ Any digit ◦ _ (underscore) ◦ - (dash) ◦ . ([...]
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Description Name The password associated with this account. If password strength check is enabled, a user's password must be strong and Cisco UCS Manager rejects any password that does not meet the following requirements: • Must contain a minimum of 8 characters and a maximum of 64 characters. • Must contain at least three of the following[...]
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Step 5 In the Roles area, check one or more boxes to assign roles and privileges to the user account. Do not assign locales to users with an admin or aaa role. Note Step 6 (Optional) If the system includes organizations, check one or more check boxes in the Locales area to assign the user to the appropriate locales. Step 7 In the SSH area, complete[...]
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Description Name The maximum number of concurrent HTTP and HTTPS sessions allowed for each user . Enter an integer between 1 and 256. Maximum Sessions Per User field The maximum number of concurrent HTTP and HTTPS sessions allowed for all users within the system. Enter an integer between 1 and 256. Maximum Sessions field Step 5 Click Save Changes .[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services > Locally Authenticated Users . Step 3 Click the user account that you want to modify . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Roles area, do the following: • T o assign a new role to[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services > Locally Authenticated Users . Step 3 Click the user that you want to disable. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Account Status field, click the inactive radio button. The admin u[...]
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Y ou must have admin or aaa privileges to change the password profile properties. Except for password history , these properties do not apply to users with admin or aaa privileges. Note Password History Count The password history count allows you to prevent locally authenticated users from reusing the same password over and over again. When this pr[...]
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Configuring the Maximum Number of Password Changes for a Change Interval Y ou must have admin or aaa privileges to change the password profile properties. Except for password history , these properties do not apply to users with admin or aaa privileges. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand Al[...]
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Configuring the Password History Count Y ou must have admin or aaa privileges to change the password profile properties. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > User Management > User Services . Step 3 Click the Locally Authenticated Users node. Step 4 In the Password Profile area, e[...]
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Description Name When a web client connects to Cisco UCS Manager, the client needs to send refresh requests to Cisco UCS Manager to keep the web session active. This option specifies the maximum amount of time allowed between refresh requests for a user in this domain. If this time limit is exceeded, Cisco UCS Manager considers the web session to b[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 182 OL-25712-04 Monitoring User Sessions[...]
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CHAPTER 11 Managing Firmware This chapter includes the following sections: • Overview of Firmware, page 183 • Firmware Image Management, page 184 • Firmware V ersions, page 186 • Firmware Upgrades, page 187 • Firmware Downgrades, page 199 • Completing the Prerequisites for Upgrading the Firmware, page 199 • Downloading and Managing Fi[...]
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• Endpoints physically located on servers, such as the BIOS, storage controller (RAID controller), and Cisco Integrated Management Controller (CIMC) that can be upgraded through firmware packages included in a service profile See the required order of steps for your upgrade path to determine the appropriate order in which to upgrade the endpoints[...]
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Cisco UCS B-Series Blade Server Software Bundle This bundle includes the following firmware images that are required to update the firmware for the blade servers in a Cisco UCS domain. In addition to the bundles created for a release, these bundles can also be released between infrastructure bundles to enable Cisco UCS Manager to support a blade se[...]
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Packages This view provides you with a read-only representation of the firmware bundles that have been downloaded onto the fabric interconnect. This view is sorted by image, not by the contents of the image. For packages, you can use this view to see which component images are in each downloaded firmware bundle. Images The images view lists the com[...]
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Firmware V ersions in the Fabric Interconnect and Cisco UCS Manager Y ou can only activate the fabric interconnect firmware and Cisco UCS Manager on the fabric interconnect. The fabric interconnect and Cisco UCS Manager firmware do not have backup versions, because all the images are stored on the fabric interconnect. As a result, the number of boo[...]
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Configuration Changes and Settings that Can Impact Upgrades Depending upon the configuration of your Cisco UCS domain, the following changes may require you to make configuration changes after you upgrade. T o avoid faults and other issues, we recommend that you make any required changes before you upgrade. Overlapping FCoE VLAN IDs and Ethernet VL[...]
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If a VSAN has an ID in the reserved range, change that VSAN ID to any VSAN ID that is not used or reserved. All Connectivity May Be Lost During Upgrades if vNIC Failover and NIC T eaming Are Both Enabled All connectivity may be lost during firmware upgrades if you have configured both Enable Failover on one or more vNICs and you have also configure[...]
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No Server or Chassis Maintenance Do not remove the hardware that contains the endpoint or perform any maintenance on it until the update process has completed. If the hardware is removed or otherwise unavailable due to maintenance, the firmware update fails. This failure may corrupt the backup partition. Y ou cannot update the firmware on an endpoi[...]
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Determine Appropriate T ype of Firmware Upgrade for Each Endpoint Some endpoints, such as adapters and the server CIMC, can be upgraded through either a direct firmware upgrade or a firmware package included in a service profile. The configuration of a Cisco UCS domain determines how you upgrade these endpoints. If the service profiles associated w[...]
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Required Order of Components for Firmware Activation If you upgrade firmware by individual components in a Cisco UCS domain, activate the updates in the required order for quicker activation and to avoid potential issues with conflicting firmware versions. Summary of Steps for Upgrading from Cisco UCS, Release 1.0(2) and Later 1 Download the follow[...]
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• Cisco UCS B-Series Blade Server Software Bundle—Required for all Cisco UCS domains that include blade servers. • Cisco UCS C-Series Rack-Mount Server Software Bundle—Only required for Cisco UCS domains that include integrated rack-mount servers. This bundle contains firmware to enable Cisco UCS Manager to manage those servers and is not a[...]
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1 Insert the blade server into the chassis as described in the server installation guide. Cisco UCS Manager cannot discover the server as it is unsupported, and the finite state machine (FSM) for the discovery fails with an unsupported server error . 2 Obtain the B-Series server bundle for the new blade server from Cisco.com and download it to the [...]
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Upgrades of a CIMC through a management firmware package or an adapter through a firmware package in the service profile associated with the server take precedence over direct firmware upgrades. Y ou cannot directly upgrade an endpoint if the service profile associated with the server includes a firmware package. T o perform a direct upgrade, you m[...]
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When you configure Set Startup V ersion Only for an I/O module, the I/O module is rebooted when the fabric interconnect in its data path is rebooted. If you do not configure Set Startup V ersion Only for an I/O module, the I/O module reboots and disrupts traffic. In addition, if Cisco UCS Manager detects a protocol and firmware version mismatch bet[...]
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• Any activities being performed on the server through the KVM console and vMedia are interrupted. • Any monitoring or IPMI polling is interrupted. Outage Impact of an Adapter Firmware Upgrade If you activate the firmware for an adapter and do not configure the Set Startup V ersion Only option, you cause the following outage impacts and disrupt[...]
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This policy ensures that the host firmware is identical on all servers associated with service profiles which use the same policy . Therefore, if you move the service profile from one server to another , the firmware versions are maintained. Also, if you change the firmware version for an endpoint in the firmware package, new versions are applied t[...]
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Service Profile Association During this stage, you include the firmware packages in a service profile, and then associate the service profile with a server . The system pushes the selected firmware versions to the endpoints. For a host firmware package, the server is rebooted to ensure that the endpoints are running the versions specified in the fi[...]
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• Back up the configuration into an All Configuration backup file. • For a cluster configuration, verify that the high availability status of the fabric interconnects shows that both are up and running. • For a standalone configuration, verify that the Overall Status of the fabric interconnect is Operable. • V erify that the data path is up[...]
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If you do not, these identities may be changed after the import and operations such as a PXE boot or a SAN boot may no longer function. • Protocol field—Click the one of the following radio buttons to indicate the protocol you want to use to transfer the file to the backup server: ◦ FTP ◦ TFTP ◦ SCP ◦ SFTP • Hostname field—Enter the[...]
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V erifying the Overall Status of the Fabric Interconnects Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects . Step 3 Click the node for the fabric interconnect that you want to verify . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Status area, [...]
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V erifying the Status of I/O Modules Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis . Step 3 Click on the chassis for which you want to verify the status of the I/O modules. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the IO Modules tab. Step 5 For each I/O module, verify that the fo[...]
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Step 5 If you need to verify that a server has been discovered, do the following: a) Right-click the server for which you want to verify the discovery status and choose Show Navigator . b) In the Status Details area of the General tab, verify that the Discovery State field displays a value of complete . If the fields in the Status Details area are [...]
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• Cisco UCS C-Series Rack-Mount Server Software Bundle—Only required for Cisco UCS domains that include integrated rack-mount servers. This bundle contains firmware to enable Cisco UCS Manager to manage those servers and is not applicable to standalone C-Series rack-mount servers. Procedure Step 1 In a web browser , navigate to Cisco.com . Step[...]
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Downloading Firmware Images to the Fabric Interconnect from a Remote Location In a cluster setup, the image file for the firmware bundle is downloaded to both fabric interconnects, regardless of which fabric interconnect is used to initiate the download. Cisco UCS Manager maintains all firmware packages and images in both fabric interconnects in sy[...]
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Description Name The absolute path to the file on the remote server . If you use SCP , the absolute path is always required. If you use any other protocol, you may not need to specify a remote path if the file resides in the default download folder . For details about how your file server is configured, contact your system administrator . Path fiel[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Firmware Management tab. Step 4 Click the Installed Firmware tab. Step 5 Click Download Firmware . Step 6 In the Download Firmware dialog box, click the Local File System radio button in the Lo[...]
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Determining the Contents of a Firmware Package Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Firmware Management tab. Step 4 On the Packages subtab, click the + icon next to a package to view its contents. Step 5 T o take a snapshot of the[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Firmware Management tab. Step 4 On the Firmware Management tab, click the Packages tab. Step 5 In the table, click the package that you want to delete. Y ou can use the Shift key or Ctrl key to[...]
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Do not remove the hardware that contains the endpoint or perform any maintenance on it until the update process has completed. If the hardware is removed or otherwise unavailable due to maintenance, the firmware update fails. This failure may corrupt the backup partition. Y ou cannot update the firmware on an endpoint with a corrupted backup partit[...]
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What to Do Next Activate the firmware. Updating the Firmware on an Adapter Do not remove the hardware that contains the endpoint or perform any maintenance on it until the update process has completed. If the hardware is removed or otherwise unavailable due to maintenance, the firmware update fails. This failure may corrupt the backup partition. Y [...]
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Activating the Firmware on an Adapter Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Expand the node for the server that includes the adapter for which you want to activate the updated firmware. Step 4 Expand Adapters and select t[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Expand the node for the server for which you want to update the BIOS firmware. Step 4 On the General tab, click the Inventory tab. Step 5 Click the Motherboard tab. Step 6 In the Acti[...]
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d) Click OK . Updating the CIMC Firmware on a Server Do not remove the hardware that contains the endpoint or perform any maintenance on it until the update process has completed. If the hardware is removed or otherwise unavailable due to maintenance, the firmware update fails. This failure may corrupt the backup partition. Y ou cannot update the f[...]
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Do not remove the hardware that contains the endpoint or perform any maintenance on it until the update process has completed. If the hardware is removed or otherwise unavailable due to maintenance, the firmware update fails. This failure may corrupt the backup partition. Y ou cannot update the firmware on an endpoint with a corrupted backup partit[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > IO Modules . Step 3 Click the I/O module that you want to update. Step 4 In the General tab, click Update Firmware . Step 5 In the Update Firmware dialog box, do the following: a) From the V ersion dr[...]
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d) Click OK . Activating the Board Controller Firmware on a Server Only certain servers, such as the Cisco UCS B440 High Performance blade server and the Cisco UCS B230 blade server , have board controller firmware. The board controller firmware controls many of the server functions, including eUSBs, LEDs, and I/O connectors. This activation proced[...]
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Activating the Cisco UCS Manager Software Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Firmware Management tab. Step 4 On the Installed Firmware tab, click Activate Firmwar e . Cisco UCS Manager GUI opens the Activate Firmware dialog box [...]
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Step 5 From the Filter drop-down list on the menu bar , choose Fabric Inter connects . Step 6 On the menu bar , check the Ignore Compatibility Check check box. Step 7 On the row of the Activate Firmware dialog box for the subordinate fabric interconnect, do the following: a) In the Kernel row , choose the firmware version to which you want to upgra[...]
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Step 2 From the Filter drop-down list on the menu bar , choose Fabric Inter connects . Step 3 On the menu bar , check the Ignore Compatibility Check check box. Step 4 On the row of the Activate Firmware dialog box for the subordinate fabric interconnect, do the following: a) In the Kernel row , choose the firmware version to which you want to upgra[...]
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Description Name Choose the version that you want to use for the kernel. Kernel V ersion drop-down list By default, Cisco UCS makes sure that the firmware version is compatible with everything running on the server before it activates that version. Check this check box if you want Cisco UCS to activate the firmware without making sure that it is co[...]
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• FC Adapters • HBA Option ROM • Storage Controller Y ou can include more than one type of firmware in the same host firmware package. For example, a host firmware package can include both BIOS firmware and storage controller firmware or adapter firmware for two different models of adapters. However , you can only have one firmware version wi[...]
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The following table describes the most common options for upgrading servers with a host or management firmware package. Upgrade Actions Maintenance Policy Service Profile After you update the firmware package, do one of the following: • T o reboot and upgrade some or all servers simultaneously , follow the procedure in the Cisco UCS Manager confi[...]
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Upgrade Actions Maintenance Policy Service Profile The following occurs when you update the firmware package: 1 The changes to the firmware package take effect as soon as you save them. 2 Cisco UCS Manager verifies the model numbers and vendor against all servers associated with service profiles that include this policy . If the model numbers and v[...]
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Upgrade Actions Maintenance Policy Service Profile The following occurs when you update the firmware package: 1 Cisco UCS Manager asks you to confirm your change and advises that a user-acknowledged reboot of the servers is required. 2 Click the flashing Pending Activities button to select the servers you want to reboot and apply the new firmware. [...]
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This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Step 6 On each sub-tab, do the following for each type of firmware you want to include in the package: a) In th[...]
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Manager updates the firmware according to the settings in the maintenance policies included in the service profiles. Creating a Management Firmware Package Before Y ou Begin Ensure that the appropriate firmware has been downloaded to the fabric interconnect. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, [...]
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Before Y ou Begin Ensure that the appropriate firmware has been downloaded to the fabric interconnect. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that includes the policy you want to update. If the system does not include multi[...]
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Step 4 Click the service profile to which you want to add the firmware packages. Step 5 In the W ork pane, click the Policies tab. Step 6 Click the down arrows to expand the Firmware Policies section. Step 7 T o add a host firmware package, select the desired policy from the Host Firmware drop-down list. Step 8 T o add a management firmware package[...]
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Implementation-Specific T unable Parameters • Power and thermal constraints • Slot ranges and numbering • Adapter capacities Hardware-Specific Rules • Firmware compatibility for components such as the BIOS, CIMC, RAID controller , and adapters • Diagnostics • Hardware-specific reboot User Display Strings • Part numbers, such as the CP[...]
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Activating a Capability Catalog Update Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All . Step 3 Click the Capability Catalog node. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the Catalog Update T asks tab. Step 5 Click Activate Catalog . Step 6 In the Activate Catalog dialog box, choose the capability catalog u[...]
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Viewing a Capability Catalog Provider Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Capability Catalog . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the tab for the provider you want to view . Step 4 T o view the details of a provider , do the following: a) In the table, click the row with the vendor , m[...]
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Updating the Capability Catalog from a Remote Location Y ou cannot perform a partial update to the Capability Catalog. When you update the Capability Catalog, all components included in the catalog image are updated. A B-series server bundle includes the Capability Catalog update for that server . Y ou do not need to download a separate Capability [...]
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Step 8 Click OK . Cisco UCS Manager downloads the image and updates the Capability Catalog. Y ou do not need to reboot any hardware components. What to Do Next Activate the Capability Catalog update. Updating the Capability Catalog from the Local File System Y ou cannot perform a partial update to the Capability Catalog. When you update the Capabil[...]
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Management Extensions enable you to add support for previously unsupported servers and other hardware to Cisco UCS Manager. For example, you may need to activate a Management Extension if you want to add a new , previously unsupported server to an existing Cisco UCS domain. The Management Extension image contains the images, information, and firmwa[...]
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CHAPTER 12 Configuring DNS Servers This chapter includes the following sections: • DNS Servers in Cisco UCS , page 237 • Adding a DNS Server , page 237 • Deleting a DNS Server , page 238 DNS Servers in Cisco UCS Y ou need to specify an external DNS server for each Cisco UCS domain to use if the system requires name resolution of hostnames. Fo[...]
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Deleting a DNS Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 In the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Services . Step 3 Click DNS Management . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the DNS Server area, right-click the DNS server you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 6 If the Cisco UCS [...]
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CHAPTER 13 Configuring System-Related Policies This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring the Chassis Discovery Policy , page 239 • Configuring the Chassis Connectivity Policy , page 243 • Configuring the Rack Server Discovery Policy , page 244 • Configuring the Aging T ime for the MAC Address T able, page 245 Configuring t[...]
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cannot discover any chassis that is wired for 1 link or 2 links. Reacknowledgement of the chassis does not resolve this issue. The following table provides an overview of how the chassis discovery policy works in a multi-chassis Cisco UCS domain: T able 9: Chassis Discovery Policy and Chassis Links Platform-Max Discovery Policy 8-Link Chassis Disco[...]
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Platform-Max Discovery Policy 8-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 4-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 2-Link Chassis Discovery Policy 1-Link Chassis Discovery Policy Number of Links Wired for the Chassis If the IOM has 4 links, the chassis is discovered by Cisco UCS Manager and added to the Cisco UCS domain as a chassis wired with 4 links. If the IOM has 8[...]
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are grouped in a fabric port channel. If set to no group, links from the IOM to the fabric interconnect are not grouped in a fabric port channel. Once a fabric port channel is created, links can be added or removed by changing the link group preference and reacknowledging the chassis, or by enabling or disabling the chassis from the port channel. T[...]
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Step 6 Click Save Changes . What to Do Next T o customize fabric port channel connectivity for a specific chassis, configure the chassis connectivity policy . Configuring the Chassis Connectivity Policy Chassis Connectivity Policy The chassis connectivity policy determines the whether a specific chassis is included in a fabric port channel after ch[...]
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• Port Channel —All links from an IOM to a fabric interconnect are grouped in a port channel. • Global —The chassis inherits this configuration from the chassis discovery policy . This is the default value. Step 6 Click Save Changes . Configuring the Rack Server Discovery Policy Rack Server Discovery Policy The rack server discovery policy [...]
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Step 6 Click Save Changes . Configuring the Aging T ime for the MAC Address T able Aging T ime for the MAC Address T able T o efficiently switch packets between ports, the fabric interconnect maintains a MAC address table. It dynamically builds the MAC address table by using the MAC source address from the packets received and the associated port o[...]
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Step 6 Click Save Changes . Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 246 OL-25712-04 Configuring the Aging T ime for the MAC Address T able[...]
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CHAPTER 14 Managing Licenses This chapter includes the following sections: • Licenses, page 247 • Obtaining the Host ID for a Fabric Interconnect, page 248 • Obtaining a License, page 249 • Downloading Licenses to the Fabric Interconnect from the Local File System, page 250 • Downloading Licenses to the Fabric Interconnect from a Remote L[...]
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• Cisco UCS 6296 fabric interconnect—pre-installed licenses for the first eighteen unified ports enabled in Cisco UCS Manager. Expansion modules come with eight licenses that can be used on the expansion module or the base module. The eight default licenses that come with a 6200 series fabric interconnect expansion module can be used to enable [...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects . Step 3 Click the node for the fabric interconnect for which you want to obtain the host ID. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Properties area, the host ID is listed in the Serial Nu[...]
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Downloading Licenses to the Fabric Interconnect from the Local File System In a cluster setup, we recommend that you download and install licenses to both fabric interconnects in matching pairs. An individual license is only downloaded to the fabric interconnect that is used to initiate the download. Note Before Y ou Begin Obtain the required licen[...]
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Downloading Licenses to the Fabric Interconnect from a Remote Location In a cluster setup, we recommend that you download and install licenses to both fabric interconnects in matching pairs. An individual license is only downloaded to the fabric interconnect that is used to initiate the download. Note Before Y ou Begin Obtain the required licenses [...]
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Description Name The username the system should use to log in to the remote server . This field does not apply if the protocol is TFTP . User field The password for the remote server username. This field does not apply if the protocol is TFTP . Password field Step 8 Click OK . Cisco UCS Manager GUI begins downloading the license to the fabric inter[...]
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V iewing the Licenses Installed on a Fabric Interconnect Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > License Management . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Installed Licenses tab to view the following details of all licenses installed on the fabric interconnect: Description Name The uniqu[...]
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Description Name The administrative state of the license. This can be one of the following: • Delete Failed —Cisco UCS could not delete the license. If this if the first time the delete failed, resubmit the delete request. If it fails a second time, contact Cisco T AC. • Delete Pending —The user has requested that Cisco UCS delete the licen[...]
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Description Name The Product Authentication Key (P AK) associated with this license, if available. P AK column The signature key associated with the licenses of the given type. Signature column The company that issued the license package file. V endor column The version of the license package file. V ersion column Determining the Grace Period Avail[...]
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Description Name The number of licenses on the peer fabric interconnect compared to this fabric interconnect. This can be one of the following: • exceeds —the peer fabric interconnect has more licenses installed than this fabric interconnect • lacks —the peer fabric interconnect has fewer licenses installed than this fabric interconnect •[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > License Management . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Installed Licenses tab. Step 4 Choose the license you want to uninstall from the table. Step 5 Click the Clear License button. Step 6 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dia[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 258 OL-25712-04 Uninstalling a License[...]
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CHAPTER 15 Managing V irtual Interfaces This chapter includes the following sections: • V irtual Interfaces, page 259 • V irtual Interface Subscription Management and Error Handling, page 259 V irtual Interfaces In a blade server environment, the number of vNICs and vHBAs configurable for a service profile is determined by adapter capability an[...]
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If you change your configuration in a way that decreases the number of VIFs available to a blade, UCS Manager will display a warning and ask you if you want to proceed. This includes several scenarios, including times where adding or moving a connection decreases the number of VIFs. Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 260 OL-2571[...]
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P ART III Network Configuration • Using the LAN Uplinks Manager , page 263 • Configuring VLANs, page 277 • Configuring LAN Pin Groups, page 293 • Configuring MAC Pools, page 295 • Configuring Quality of Service, page 297 • Configuring Network-Related Policies, page 307 • Configuring Upstream Disjoint Layer-2 Networks, page 321[...]
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CHAPTER 16 Using the LAN Uplinks Manager This chapter includes the following sections: • LAN Uplinks Manager , page 263 • Launching the LAN Uplinks Manager , page 264 • Changing the Ethernet Switching Mode with the LAN Uplinks Manager , page 264 • Configuring a Port with the LAN Uplinks Manager , page 264 • Configuring Server Ports, page [...]
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Some of the configuration that you can do in the LAN Uplinks Manager can also be done in nodes on other tabs, such as the Equipment tab or the LAN tab. Launching the LAN Uplinks Manager Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, click the LAN node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the LAN Uplinks Manager link [...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the LAN Uplinks tab. Step 2 In the Ports area, click the down arrows to expand the Unconfigured Ports section. Step 3 Expand Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 4 Expand one of the following: • Fixed Module —T o configure a port in the fixed module as a server port or an [...]
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Disabling a Server Port with the LAN Uplinks Manager Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the LAN Uplinks tab. Step 2 In the Ports area, click the down arrows to expand the Server Ports section. Step 3 Expand Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 4 Right-click the port that you want to disable and choose Disable .[...]
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Disabling an Uplink Ethernet Port with the LAN Uplinks Manager Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the LAN Uplinks tab. Step 2 In the Port Channels and Uplinks area, expand Interfaces > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 Right-click the port that you want to disable and choose Disable Interfaces . Y ou ca[...]
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• Fabric Interconnect B Step 4 In the Set Port Channel Name page of the Create Port Channel wizard, do the following: a) Complete the following fields: Description Name The identifier for the port channel. Enter an integer between 1 and 256. This ID cannot be changed after the port channel has been saved. ID field A user-defined name for the port[...]
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Disabling a Port Channel with the LAN Uplinks Manager Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the LAN Uplinks tab. Step 2 In the Port Channels and Uplinks area, expand Port Channels > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 Right-click the port channel that you want to disable and choose Disable Port Channel . Ste[...]
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Removing Ports from a Port Channel with the LAN Uplinks Manager Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the LAN Uplinks tab. Step 2 In the Port Channels and Uplinks area, expand Port Channels > Fabric Interconnects > Fabric_Interconnect_Name . Step 3 Expand the port channel from which you want to remove ports. Step 4 Right-click t[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the LAN Uplinks tab. Step 2 In the Port Channels and Uplinks area, click Create Pin Gr oup . Step 3 In the Create LAN Pin Gr oup dialog box, enter a unique name and description for the pin group. Step 4 T o pin traffic for fabric interconnect A, do the following in the T argets area: a) Check the [...]
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Y ou cannot create VLANs with IDs from 3968 to 4047. This range of VLAN IDs is reserved. VLANs in the LAN cloud and FCoE VLANs in the SAN cloud must have different IDs. Using the same ID for a VLAN and an FCoE VLAN in a VSAN results in a critical fault and traf fic disruption for all vNICs and uplink ports using that VLAN. Ethernet traf fic is drop[...]
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Description Name T o create one VLAN, enter a single numeric ID. T o create multiple VLANs, enter individual IDs or ranges of IDs separated by commas. A VLAN ID can: • Be between 1 and 3967 • Be between 4048 and 4093 • Overlap with other VLAN IDs already defined on the system For example, to create six VLANs with the IDs 4, 22, 40, 41, 42, an[...]
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Deleting a Named VLAN with the LAN Uplinks Manager If Cisco UCS Manager includes a named VLAN with the same VLAN ID as the one you delete, the VLAN is not removed from the fabric interconnect configuration until all named VLANs with that ID are deleted. Procedure Step 1 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click the VLANs tab. Step 2 Click one of the follo[...]
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Description Name If checked, the associated QoS class is configured on the fabric interconnect and can be assigned to a QoS policy . If unchecked, the class is not configured on the fabric interconnect and any QoS policies associated with this class default to Best Effort or , if a system class is configured with a Cos of 0, to the Cos 0 system cla[...]
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Description Name The maximum transmission unit for the channel. This can be one of the following: • An integer between 1500 and 9216. This value corresponds to the maximum packet size. • fc —A predefined packet size of 2240. • normal —A predefined packet size of 1500. This field is always set to fc for Fibre Channel . Note MTU drop-down l[...]
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CHAPTER 17 Configuring VLANs This chapter includes the following sections: • Named VLANs, page 277 • Private VLANs, page 278 • VLAN Port Limitations, page 279 • Configuring Named VLANs, page 280 • Configuring Private VLANs, page 285 • V iewing the VLAN Port Count, page 291 Named VLANs A named VLAN creates a connection to a specific exte[...]
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Guidelines for VLAN IDs Y ou cannot create VLANs with IDs from 3968 to 4047. This range of VLAN IDs is reserved. VLANs in the LAN cloud and FCoE VLANs in the SAN cloud must have different IDs. Using the same ID for a VLAN and an FCoE VLAN in a VSAN results in a critical fault and traf fic disruption for all vNICs and uplink ports using that VLAN. E[...]
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• VIFs on VNT AG adapters can have only one isolated VLAN. Guidelines for VLAN IDs Y ou cannot create VLANs with IDs from 3968 to 4047. This range of VLAN IDs is reserved. VLANs in the LAN cloud and FCoE VLANs in the SAN cloud must have different IDs. Using the same ID for a VLAN and an FCoE VLAN in a VSAN results in a critical fault and traf fic[...]
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• Configuring and unconfiguring border ports and border port channels • Adding or removing VLANs from a cloud • Configuring or unconfiguring SAN or NAS ports • Associating or disassociating service profiles that contain configuration changes • Configuring or unconfiguring VLANs under vNICs or vHBAs • Upon receiving creation or deleting [...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, click the LAN node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the VLANs tab. Step 4 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable it. Step 5 In the Create VLANs dialog box, complete the following fields: D[...]
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Description Name T o create one VLAN, enter a single numeric ID. T o create multiple VLANs, enter individual IDs or ranges of IDs separated by commas. A VLAN ID can: • Be between 1 and 3967 • Be between 4048 and 4093 • Overlap with other VLAN IDs already defined on the system For example, to create six VLANs with the IDs 4, 22, 40, 41, 42, an[...]
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Page 319
Description Name This can be one of the following: • A • B • Dual —The component is accessible to either fabric interconnect. This setting applies to virtual LAN and SAN networks created at the system level as opposed to the fabric interconnect level. Fabric ID column The name of the VLAN. Name column The numeric id for the VLAN. VLAN colum[...]
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• The LAN Cloud > VLANs node for a VLAN accessible to both fabric interconnects. • The Fabric_Interconnect_Name > VLANs node for a VLAN accessible to only one fabric interconnect. Deleting a Named VLAN If Cisco UCS Manager includes a named VLAN with the same VLAN ID as the one you delete, the VLAN is not removed from the fabric interconne[...]
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Configuring Private VLANs Creating a Primary VLAN for a Private VLAN In a Cisco UCS domain that is configured for high availability , you can create a primary VLAN that is accessible to both fabric interconnects or to only one fabric interconnect. Y ou cannot create VLANs with IDs from 3968 to 4047. This range of VLAN IDs is reserved. VLANs in the [...]
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Description Name Y ou can choose one of the following: • Common/Global —The VLANs apply to both fabrics and use the same configuration parameters in both cases • Fabric A —The VLANs only apply to fabric A. • Fabric B —The VLAN only apply to fabric B. • Both Fabrics Configured Differ ently —The VLANs apply to both fabrics but you can[...]
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Description Name Click this button to determine whether the VLAN ID overlaps with any other IDs on the system. Check Overlap button Step 6 If you clicked the Check Overlap button, do the following: a) Click the Overlapping VLANs tab and review the following fields to verify that the VLAN ID does not overlap with any IDs assigned to existing VLANs. [...]
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Description Name The full path to the VSAN. Click the link in this column to view the properties for the VSAN. DN column c) Click OK . d) If Cisco UCS Manager identified any overlapping VLAN IDs or FCoE VLAN IDs, change the VLAN ID to one that does not overlap with an existing VLAN. Step 7 Click OK . Cisco UCS Manager adds the primary VLAN to one o[...]
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Description Name For a single VLAN, this is the VLAN name. For a range of VLANs, this is the prefix that the system uses for each VLAN name. The VLAN name is case sensitive. This name can be between 1 and 32 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), an[...]
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Description Name Whether this VLAN is subdivided into private or secondary VLANs. This can be one of the following: • None —This VLAN does not have any secondary or private VLANs. • Primary —This VLAN can have one or more secondary VLANs, as shown in the Secondary VLANs area. • Isolated —This is a private VLAN. The primary VLAN with whi[...]
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Description Name This can be one of the following: • A • B • Dual —The component is accessible to either fabric interconnect. This setting applies to virtual LAN and SAN networks created at the system level as opposed to the fabric interconnect level. Fabric ID column The name of the VSAN. Name column The numeric id for the VSAN. ID column [...]
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Description Name The maximum number of VLAN ports allowed on this fabric interconnect. VLAN Port Limit field The number of available VLAN access ports. Access VLAN Port Count field The number of available VLAN border ports. Border VLAN Port Count field The VLAN port allocation status. Allocation Status field Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guid[...]
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CHAPTER 18 Configuring LAN Pin Groups This chapter includes the following sections: • LAN Pin Groups, page 293 • Creating a LAN Pin Group, page 293 • Deleting a LAN Pin Group, page 294 LAN Pin Groups Cisco UCS uses LAN pin groups to pin Ethernet traf fic from a vNIC on a server to an uplink Ethernet port or port channel on the fabric intercon[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > LAN Cloud . Step 3 Right-click LAN Pin Groups and select Cr eate LAN Pin Group . Step 4 In the Create LAN Pin Gr oup dialog box, enter a unique name and description for the pin group. Step 5 T o pin traffic for fabric interconnect A, do the following [...]
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CHAPTER 19 Configuring MAC Pools This chapter includes the following sections: • MAC Pools, page 295 • Creating a MAC Pool, page 295 • Deleting a MAC Pool, page 296 MAC Pools A MAC pool is a collection of network identities, or MAC addresses, that are unique in their layer 2 environment and are available to be assigned to vNICs on a server . [...]
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Step 4 Right-click MAC Pools and select Create MAC Pool . Step 5 In the first page of the Create MAC Pool wizard: a) Enter a unique name and description for the MAC Pool. b) Click Next . Step 6 In the second page of the Create MAC Pool wizard: a) Click Add . b) In the Create a Block of MAC Addresses page, enter the first MAC address in the pool and[...]
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CHAPTER 20 Configuring Quality of Service This chapter includes the following sections: • Quality of Service, page 297 • Configuring System Classes, page 297 • Configuring Quality of Service Policies, page 301 • Configuring Flow Control Policies, page 304 Quality of Service Cisco UCS provides the following methods to implement quality of se[...]
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T able 10: System Classes Description System Class A configurable set of system classes that you can include in the QoS policy for a service profile. Each system class manages one lane of traffic. All properties of these system classes are available for you to assign custom settings and policies. Platinum Gold Silver Bronze A system class that sets[...]
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Description Name If checked, the associated QoS class is configured on the fabric interconnect and can be assigned to a QoS policy . If unchecked, the class is not configured on the fabric interconnect and any QoS policies associated with this class default to Best Effort or , if a system class is configured with a Cos of 0, to the Cos 0 system cla[...]
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Page 336
Description Name The maximum transmission unit for the channel. This can be one of the following: • An integer between 1500 and 9216. This value corresponds to the maximum packet size. • fc —A predefined packet size of 2240. • normal —A predefined packet size of 1500. This field is always set to fc for Fibre Channel . Note MTU drop-down l[...]
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Page 337
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 In the LAN tab, expand LAN > LAN Cloud . Step 3 Select the QoS System Class node. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 Uncheck the Enabled check box for the QoS system that you want to disable. Step 6 Click Save Changes . Configuring Quality of Service Policies[...]
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Description Name The priority assigned to this QoS definition. This can be one of the following: • Fc —Use this priority for QoS policies that control vHBA traffic only . • Platinum —Use this priority for QoS policies that control vNIC traffic only . • Gold —Use this priority for QoS policies that control vNIC traffic only . • Silver [...]
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Description Name Whether Cisco UCS controls the class of service (CoS). This can be one of the following: • None —Cisco UCS uses the CoS value associated with the priority selected in the Priority drop-down list regardless of the CoS value assigned by the host. • Full —If the packet has a valid CoS value assigned by the host, Cisco UCS uses[...]
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Configuring Flow Control Policies Flow Control Policy Flow control policies determine whether the uplink Ethernet ports in a Cisco UCS domain send and receive IEEE 802.3x pause frames when the receive buffer for a port fills. These pause frames request that the transmitting port stop sending data for a few milliseconds until the buffer clears. For [...]
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Description Name This can be one of the following: • Auto —Cisco UCS and the network negotiate whether PPP is used on this fabric interconnect • On —PPP is enabled on this fabric interconnect Priority field This can be one of the following: • Off —Pause requests from the network are ignored and traffic flow continues as normal • On ?[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 306 OL-25712-04 Configuring Flow Control Policies[...]
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CHAPTER 21 Configuring Network-Related Policies This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring vNIC T emplates, page 307 • Configuring Ethernet Adapter Policies, page 312 • Configuring Network Control Policies, page 317 Configuring vNIC T emplates vNIC T emplate This policy defines how a vNIC on a server connects to the LAN. This[...]
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• Named VLAN • MAC pool • QoS policy • LAN pin group • Statistics threshold policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy . If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root nod[...]
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Description Name The fabric interconnect associated with the component. If you want vNICs created from this template to be able to access the second fabric interconnect if the default one is unavailable, check the Enable Failover check box. Do not enable vNIC fabric failover under the following circumstances: Note • If the Cisco UCS domain is run[...]
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b) In the VLANs area, use the table to select the VLAN to assign to vNICs created from this template. The table contains the following columns: Description Name Check the check box in this column for each VLAN that you want to use. Select column The name of the VLAN. Name column T o designate one of the VLANs as the native VLAN, click the radio but[...]
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What to Do Next Include the vNIC template in a service profile. Deleting a vNIC T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > Policies > Or ganization_Name . Step 3 Expand the vNIC T emplates node. Step 4 Right-click the policy you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cis[...]
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b) Click OK . Step 9 In the warning dialog box, click Y es to acknowledge that Cisco UCS Manager may need to reboot the server if the binding causes the vNIC to be reconfigured. Unbinding a vNIC from a vNIC T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Ste[...]
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For Fibre Channel adapter policies, the values displayed by Cisco UCS Manager may not match those displayed by applications such as QLogic SANsurfer . For example, the following values may result in an apparent mismatch between SANsurfer and Cisco UCS Manager: Note • Max LUNs Per T ar get—SANsurfer has a maximum of 256 LUNs and does not display[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy . If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Right-click Adapter Policies and choose Create Ethernet Adapter Policy [...]
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Description Name The number of interrupt resources to allocate. In general, this value should be equal to the number of completion queue resources. Enter an integer between 1 and 514. Interrupts field Step 7 (Optional) In the Options area, adjust the following values: Description Name This can be one of the following: • Disabled —The CPU calcul[...]
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Page 352
Description Name RSS distributes network receive processing across multiple CPUs in multiprocessor systems. This can be one of the following: • Disabled —Network receive processing is always handled by a single processor even if additional processors are available. • Enabled —Network receive processing is shared across processors whenever p[...]
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Deleting an Ethernet Adapter Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > Policies > Or ganization_Name . Step 3 Expand the Adapter Policies node. Step 4 Right-click the Ethernet adapter policy that you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a c[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager, release 1.4(2) and earlier did not enforce the Action on Uplink Fail property for those types of non-VM-FEX capable converged network adapters mentioned above. If the Action on Uplink Fail property was set to link-down, Cisco UCS Manager would ignore this setting and instead issue a warning. In the current version of Cisco UCS Ma[...]
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Description Name This option determines whether Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) is enabled on servers associated with a service profile that includes this policy . This can be one of the following: • Disabled • Enabled CDP field Whether adapter-registered MAC addresses are added only to the native VLAN associated with the interface or added to a[...]
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Step 6 In the MAC Security area, do the following to determine whether the server can use different MAC addresses when sending packets to the fabric interconnect: a) Click the Expand icon to expand the area and display the radio buttons. b) Click one of the following radio buttons to determine whether forged MAC addresses are allowed or denied when[...]
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CHAPTER 22 Configuring Upstream Disjoint Layer -2 Networks This chapter includes the following sections: • Upstream Disjoint Layer-2 Networks, page 321 • Guidelines for Configuring Upstream Disjoint L2 Networks, page 322 • Pinning Considerations for Upstream Disjoint L2 Networks, page 323 • Configuring Cisco UCS for Upstream Disjoint L2 Net[...]
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that is specifically assigned to that VLAN, and is selectively excluded from all other uplink ports and port channels. However , traf fic for VLANs that are not specifically assigned to an uplink Ethernet port or port channel can still travel on all uplink ports or port channels, including those that carry traffic for the disjoint L2 networks. In C[...]
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Appliance Port Must Be Configured with the Same VLAN as Uplink Ethernet Port or Port Channel For an appliance port to communicate with a disjoint L2 network, you must ensure that at least one uplink Ethernet port or port channel is in the same network and is therefore assigned to the same VLANs that are used by the appliance port. If Cisco UCS Mana[...]
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• Drops the traffic for all of the VLANs on the vNIC. • Raises the following faults: ◦ Link Down ◦ VIF Down Cisco UCS Manager does not raise a fault or warning about the VLAN configuration. For example, a vNIC on a server is configured with VLANs 101, 102, and 103. Interface 1/3 is assigned only to VLAN 102. Interfaces 1/1 and 1/2 are not e[...]
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Procedure Purpose Command or Action The Ethernet switching mode must be in End-Host Mode for Cisco UCS to be able to communicate with upstream disjoint L2 networks. Configure Ethernet switching mode for both fabric interconnects in Ethernet End-Host Mode. Step 1 See Configuring Ethernet Switching Mode . See Configuring Ports and Port Channels, on p[...]
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Page 362
The LAN Uplinks Manager opens in a separate window . Step 4 In the LAN Uplinks Manager , click VLANs > VLAN Manager . Step 5 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable it. Step 6 In the Create VLANs dialog box, complete the following fields and then click OK : Description[...]
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Page 363
Description Name Whether this VLAN is subdivided into private or secondary VLANs. This can be one of the following: • None —This VLAN does not have any secondary or private VLANs. • Primary —This VLAN can have one or more secondary VLANs, as shown in the Secondary VLANs area. • Isolated —This is a private VLAN. The primary VLAN with whi[...]
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Description Subtab Displays the ports, port channels, and VLANs that are accessible to fabric interconnect B. Fabric B Step 6 In the Ports and Port Channels table, do the following: • T o assign an Uplink Ethernet port channel to a VLAN, expand the Port Channels node and click the port channel you want to assign to the VLAN. • T o assign an Upl[...]
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Description Subtab Displays the ports, port channels, and VLANs that are accessible to fabric interconnect A. Fabric A Displays the ports, port channels, and VLANs that are accessible to fabric interconnect B. Fabric B Step 6 In the VLANs table, expand the appropriate node and the VLAN from which you want to remove a port or port channel. Step 7 Cl[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 330 OL-25712-04 Viewing Ports and Port Channels Assigned to VLANs[...]
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P ART IV Storage Configuration • Configuring Named VSANs, page 333 • Configuring SAN Pin Groups, page 343 • Configuring WWN Pools, page 345 • Configuring Storage-Related Policies, page 355[...]
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[...]
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CHAPTER 23 Configuring Named VSANs This chapter includes the following sections: • Named VSANs, page 333 • Fibre Channel Uplink T runking for Named VSANs, page 334 • Guidelines and Recommendations for VSANs, page 334 • Creating a Named VSAN, page 335 • Creating a Storage VSAN, page 337 • Deleting a VSAN, page 339 • Changing the VLAN I[...]
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Page 370
For FIP capable, converged network adapters, such as the Cisco UCS CNA M72KR-Q and the Cisco UCS CNA M72KR-E, the named VSAN must be configured with a named VLAN that is not the native VLAN for the FCoE VLAN ID. This configuration ensures that FCoE traffic can pass through these adapters. In the following sample configuration, a service profile wit[...]
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1 Renders all VSANs with an ID in the range from 3840 to 4079 non-operational. 2 Raises a fault against the non-operational VSANs. 3 T ransfers all non-operational VSANs to the default VSAN. 4 T ransfers all vHBAs associated with the non-operational VSANs to the default VSAN. If you disable Fibre Channel trunking and delete any existing SAN port ch[...]
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Page 372
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > SAN Cloud . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the VSANs tab. Step 4 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable it. Step 5 In the Create VSAN dialog box, complete the following fi[...]
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Description Name The unique identifier assigned to the network. The ID can be between 1 and 4078, or between 4080 and 4093. 4079 is a reserved VSAN ID. In addition, if you plan to use FC end-host mode, the range between 3840 to 4079 is also a reserved VSAN ID range. VSAN ID field The unique identifier assigned to the VLAN used for Fibre Channel con[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > Storage Cloud . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the VSANs tab. Step 4 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable it. Step 5 In the Create VSAN dialog box, complete the followin[...]
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Description Name The unique identifier assigned to the network. The ID can be between 1 and 4078, or between 4080 and 4093. 4079 is a reserved VSAN ID. In addition, if you plan to use FC end-host mode, the range between 3840 to 4079 is also a reserved VSAN ID range. VSAN ID field The unique identifier assigned to the VLAN used for Fibre Channel con[...]
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Page 376
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 In the SAN tab, click the SAN node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the VSANs tab. Step 4 Click one of the following subtabs, depending upon what type of VSAN you want to delete: Description Subtab Displays all VSANs in the Cisco UCS domain. All Displays the VSANs that are accessibl[...]
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• After a fresh install of Cisco UCS, release 2.0: The FCoE VLAN for the default VSAN uses VLAN 4048 by default. The FCoE storage port native VLAN uses VLAN 4049. Step 6 Click Save Changes . Enabling Fibre Channel Uplink T runking If the fabric interconnects are configured for Fibre Channel end-host mode, enabling Fibre Channel uplink trunking re[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 342 OL-25712-04 Disabling Fibre Channel Uplink T runking[...]
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CHAPTER 24 Configuring SAN Pin Groups This chapter includes the following sections: • SAN Pin Groups, page 343 • Creating a SAN Pin Group, page 343 • Deleting a SAN Pin Group, page 344 SAN Pin Groups Cisco UCS uses SAN pin groups to pin Fibre Channel traf fic from a vHBA on a server to an uplink Fibre Channel port on the fabric interconnect. [...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 In the SAN tab, expand SAN > SAN Cloud . Step 3 Right-click SAN Pin Groups and select Cr eate SAN Pin Group . Step 4 Enter a unique name and description for the pin group. Step 5 T o pin traffic for fabric interconnect A, do the following in the T argets area: a) Check the Fabric[...]
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CHAPTER 25 Configuring WWN Pools This chapter includes the following sections: • WWN Pools, page 345 • Configuring WWNN Pools, page 346 • Configuring WWPN Pools, page 350 WWN Pools A WWN pool is a collection of WWNs for use by the Fibre Channel vHBAs in a Cisco UCS domain. Y ou create separate pools for the following: • WW node names assign[...]
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WWPN Pools A WWPN pool is a WWN pool that contains only WW port names. If you include a pool of WWPNs in a service profile, the port on each vHBA of the associated server is assigned a WWPN from that pool. Configuring WWNN Pools Creating a WWNN Pool A WWN pool can include only WWNNs or WWPNs in the ranges from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF[...]
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Adding a WWN Block to a WWNN Pool A WWN pool can include only WWNNs or WWPNs in the ranges from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF or from 50:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 5F:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF . All other WWN ranges are reserved. T o ensure the uniqueness of the Cisco UCS WWNNs and WWPNs in the SAN fabric, we recommend that you use the[...]
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Adding a WWNN Initiator to a WWNN Pool A WWN pool can include only WWNNs or WWPNs in the ranges from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF or from 50:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 5F:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF . All other WWN ranges are reserved. T o ensure the uniqueness of the Cisco UCS WWNNs and WWPNs in the SAN fabric, we recommend that you us[...]
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Deleting a WWNN Initiator from a WWNN Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 In the SAN tab, expand SAN > Pools > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand the WWPN Pools node. Step 4 Choose the WWNN pool from which you want to delete a WWNN initiator . Step 5 In the W ork pane, click the Initiators tab. Step 6 Right-[...]
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Configuring WWPN Pools Creating a WWPN Pool A WWN pool can include only WWNNs or WWPNs in the ranges from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF or from 50:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 5F:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF . All other WWN ranges are reserved. T o ensure the uniqueness of the Cisco UCS WWNNs and WWPNs in the SAN fabric, we recommend that y[...]
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Adding a WWN Block to a WWPN Pool A WWN pool can include only WWNNs or WWPNs in the ranges from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF or from 50:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 5F:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF . All other WWN ranges are reserved. T o ensure the uniqueness of the Cisco UCS WWNNs and WWPNs in the SAN fabric, we recommend that you use the[...]
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Adding a WWPN Initiator to a WWPN Pool A WWN pool can include only WWNNs or WWPNs in the ranges from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF or from 50:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 5F:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF . All other WWN ranges are reserved. T o ensure the uniqueness of the Cisco UCS WWNNs and WWPNs in the SAN fabric, we recommend that you us[...]
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Deleting a WWPN Initiator from a WWPN Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 In the SAN tab, expand SAN > Pools > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand the WWPN Pools node. Step 4 Choose the WWPN pool from which you want to delete a WWPN initiator . Step 5 In the W ork pane, click the Initiators tab. Step 6 Right-[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 354 OL-25712-04 Configuring WWPN Pools[...]
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CHAPTER 26 Configuring Storage-Related Policies This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring vHBA T emplates, page 355 • Configuring Fibre Channel Adapter Policies, page 358 Configuring vHBA T emplates vHBA T emplate This template is a policy that defines how a vHBA on a server connects to the SAN. It is also referred to as a vHB[...]
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Page 392
If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Right-click the vHBA T emplates node and choose Cr eate vHBA T emplate . Step 5 In the Create vHBA T emplate dialog box, complete the following fields: Description Name The name of the virtual HBA template. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cann[...]
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Step 6 Click OK . What to Do Next Include the vHBA template in a service profile. Deleting a vHBA T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > Policies > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand the vHBA T emplates node. Step 4 Right-click the vHBA template that you want to delete and choo[...]
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a) From the vHBA T emplate drop-down list, choose the template to which you want to bind the vHBA. b) Click OK . Step 9 In the warning dialog box, click Y es to acknowledge that Cisco UCS Manager may need to reboot the server if the binding causes the vHBA to be reconfigured. Unbinding a vHBA from a vHBA T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation[...]
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For Fibre Channel adapter policies, the values displayed by Cisco UCS Manager may not match those displayed by applications such as QLogic SANsurfer . For example, the following values may result in an apparent mismatch between SANsurfer and Cisco UCS Manager: Note • Max LUNs Per T ar get—SANsurfer has a maximum of 256 LUNs and does not display[...]
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Page 396
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy . If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Right-click Fibre Channel Policies and choose Cr eate Fibre Channel Ada[...]
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Page 397
Description Name The number of SCSI IO queue resources the system should allocate. Enter an integer between 1 and 8. The default is 1. At this time, the Cisco UCS M81KR V irtual Interface Card adapter supports only one SCSI I/O queue. Note SCSI I/O Queues field The number of descriptors in each SCSI I/O queue. Enter an integer between 64 and 512. T[...]
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Description Name The number of times that the system tries to log into a port after the first failure. Enter an integer between 0 and 255. The default is 8. W e recommend you consult your storage array documentation for the optimal value for this parameter . This parameter only applies to a server with a VIC adapter . Note Plogi Retries field The n[...]
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Description Name The number of milliseconds the uplink port should be offline before it informs the system that the uplink port is down and fabric connectivity has been lost. Enter an integer between 0 and 240000. The default is 30,000. W e recommend you consult your storage array documentation for the optimal value for this parameter . This parame[...]
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Description Name The method used to send interrupts to the operating system from the driver . This can be one of the following: • MSI-X —Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI) with the optional extension. W e recommend that you select this option if the operating system on the server supports it. • MSI —MSI only . • INTx —PCI INTx interrupts[...]
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P ART V Server Configuration • Configuring Server-Related Pools, page 367 • Setting the Management IP Address, page 373 • Configuring Server-Related Policies, page 381 • Configuring Server Boot, page 439 • Deferring Deployment of Service Profile Updates, page 469 • Configuring Service Profiles, page 487 • Managing Power in Cisco UCS, [...]
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CHAPTER 27 Configuring Server -Related Pools This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring Server Pools, page 367 • Configuring UUID Suffix Pools, page 369 Configuring Server Pools Server Pools A server pool contains a set of servers. These servers typically share the same characteristics. Those characteristics can be their locati[...]
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Step 4 Right-click the Server Pools node and select Create Server Pool . Step 5 On the Set Name and Description page of the Create Server Pool wizard, complete the following fields: Description Name The name of the server pool. This name can be between 1 and 32 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - ([...]
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Adding Servers to a Server Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Pools > Organization_Name . Step 3 Right-click the pool to which you want to add one or more servers and select Add Servers to Server Pool . Step 4 In the Add Servers to Server Pool dialog box, do the fol[...]
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Creating a UUID Suffix Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Pools . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the pool. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Right-click UUID Suffix Pools and select Create U[...]
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Page 407
Deleting a UUID Suffix Pool If you delete a pool, Cisco UCS Manager does not reallocate any addresses from that pool that have been assigned to vNICs or vHBAs. All assigned addresses from a deleted pool remain with the vNIC or vHBA to which they are assigned until one of the following occurs: • The associated service profiles are deleted. • The[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 372 OL-25712-04 Configuring UUID Suffix Pools[...]
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CHAPTER 28 Setting the Management IP Address This chapter includes the following sections: • Management IP Address, page 373 • Configuring the Management IP Address on a Blade Server , page 374 • Configuring the Management IP Address on a Rack Server , page 375 • Setting the Management IP Address on a Service Profile, page 376 • Setting t[...]
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Y ou cannot assign a static IP address to a server or service profile if that IP address has already been assigned to a server or service profile in the Cisco UCS domain. If you attempt to do so, Cisco UCS Manager warns you that the IP address is already in use and rejects the configuration. Note A management IP address that is assigned to a servic[...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Click the server that you want to configure to use the management IP pool. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the Inventory tab. Step 5 Click the CIMC subtab. Step 6 In the Actions area,[...]
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Configuring a Rack Server to Use the Management IP Pool If this action is greyed out, the server is already configured to use the management IP pool. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Rack Mounts > Servers . Step 3 Click the server that you want to configure to us[...]
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Description Field The static IPv4 address to be assigned to the service profile IP Address The subnet mask for the IP address. Subnet Mask The default gateway that the IP address should use. Default Gateway Step 9 Click Save Changes . Setting the Management IP Address on a Service Profile T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the[...]
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Y ou can configure service profiles and service profile templates to use IP addresses from the management IP pool. Y ou cannot configure servers to use the management IP pool. All IP addresses in the management IP pool must be in the same subnet as the IP address of the fabric interconnect. The management IP pool must not contain any IP addresses t[...]
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Deleting an IP Address Block from the Management IP Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 In the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Services > Management IP Pool (ext-mgmt) . Step 3 Right-click the IP address block that you want to delete and select Delete . Step 4 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 380 OL-25712-04 Configuring the Management IP Pool[...]
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CHAPTER 29 Configuring Server -Related Policies This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring BIOS Settings, page 381 • Configuring IPMI Access Profiles, page 405 • Configuring Local Disk Configuration Policies, page 407 • Configuring Scrub Policies, page 413 • Configuring Serial over LAN Policies, page 415 • Configuring S[...]
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Cisco UCS Manager pushes BIOS configuration changes through a BIOS policy or default BIOS settings to the Cisco Integrated Management Controller (CIMC) buf fer . These changes remain in the buf fer and do not take effect until the server is rebooted. W e recommend that you verify the support for BIOS settings in the server that you want to configur[...]
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Description Name What happens when the server encounters a critical error during POST . This can be one of the following: • disabled —The BIOS continues to attempt to boot the server . • enabled —The BIOS pauses the attempt to boot the server and opens the Error Manager when a critical error occurs during POST . • Platform Default —The [...]
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Description Name Whether the BIOS publishes the ACPI 1.0 version of F ADT in the Root System Description table. This version may be required for compatibility with OS versions that only support ACPI 1.0. This can be one of the following: • disabled —ACPI 1.0 version is not published. • enabled —ACPI 1.0 version is published. • Platform De[...]
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Description Name Whether the processor uses Enhanced Intel SpeedStep T echnology , which allows the system to dynamically adjust processor voltage and core frequency . This technology can result in decreased average power consumption and decreased average heat production. This can be one of the following: • disabled —The processor never dynamic[...]
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Description Name Sets the state of logical processor cores in a package. If you disable this setting, Hyper Threading is also disabled. This can be one of the following: • all —Enables multi processing on all logical processor cores. • 1 through 10 —Specifies the number of logical processor cores that can run on the server . T o disable mul[...]
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Description Name Allows processors to increase I/O performance by placing data from I/O devices directly into the processor cache. This setting helps to reduce cache misses. This can be one of the following: • disabled —Data from I/O devices is not placed directly into the processor cache. • enabled —Data from I/O devices is placed directly[...]
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Description Name Whether the processor sends the C3 report to the operating system. This can be one of the following: • disabled —The processor does not send the C3 report. • acpi-c2 —The processor sends the C3 report using the ACPI C2 format. • acpi-c3 —The processor sends the C3 report using the ACPI C3 format. • Platform Default ?[...]
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Description Name Sets the CPU performance profile for the server . This can be one of the following: • enterprise —All prefetchers and data reuse are disabled. • high-throughput —All prefetchers are enabled, and data reuse is disabled. • hpc —All prefetchers and data reuse are enabled. This setting is also known as high performance comp[...]
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Description Name The amount of power available to the server components when they are idle. This can be one of the following: • c0 —The server provides all server components with full power at all times. This option maintains the highest level of performance and requires the greatest amount of power . • c1 —When the CPU is idle, the system [...]
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Description Name Whether the processor supports Intel VT-d Interrupt Remapping. This can be one of the following: • disabled —The processor does not support remapping. • enabled —The processor uses VT-d Interrupt Remapping as required. • Platform Default —The BIOS uses the value for this attribute contained in the BIOS defaults for the [...]
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RAS Memory BIOS Settings The following table lists the RAS memory BIOS settings that you can configure through a BIOS policy or the default BIOS settings: Description Name How the memory reliability , availability , and serviceability (RAS) is configured for the server . This can be one of the following: • maximum performance —System performanc[...]
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Description Name Memory mirroring enhances system reliability by keeping two identical data images in memory . This option is only available if you choose the mirroring option for Memory RAS Config . It can be one of the following: • inter-socket —Memory is mirrored between two Integrated Memory Controllers (IMCs) across CPU sockets. • intra-[...]
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Serial Port BIOS Settings The following table lists the serial port BIOS settings that you can configure through a BIOS policy or the default BIOS settings: Description Name Whether serial port A is enabled or disabled. This can be one of the following: • disabled —The serial port is disabled. • enabled —The serial port is enabled. • Plat[...]
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Description Name Whether the USB System Idle Power Optimizing setting is used to reduce USB EHCI idle power consumption. Depending upon the value you choose, this setting can have an impact on performance. This can be one of the following: • high-performance —The USB System Idle Power Optimizing setting is disabled, because optimal performance [...]
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Description Name Whether the BIOS maximizes memory usage below 4GB for an operating system without P AE support, depending on the system configuration. This can be one of the following: • disabled —Does not maximize memory usage. Choose this option for all operating systems with P AE support. • enabled —Maximizes memory usage below 4GB for [...]
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Description Name Whether the Intel SAS Entry RAID Module is enabled. This can be one of the following: • disabled —The Intel SAS Entry RAID Module is disabled. • enabled —The Intel SAS Entry RAID Module is enabled. • Platform Default —The BIOS uses the value for this attribute contained in the BIOS defaults for the server type and vendo[...]
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General Settings Description Name Whether the BIOS generates a non-maskable interrupt (NMI) and logs an error when a system error (SERR) occurs. This can be one of the following: • disabled —The BIOS does not generate an NMI or log an error when a SERR occurs. • enabled —The BIOS generates an NMI and logs an error when a SERR occurs. Y ou m[...]
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Description Name What action the system takes if the watchdog timer expires. This can be one of the following: • power-off —The server is powered off if the watchdog timer expires during OS boot. • reset —The server is reset if the watchdog timer expires during OS boot. • Platform Default —The BIOS uses the value for this attribute cont[...]
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Console Redirection Settings Description Name Allows a serial port to be used for console redirection during POST and BIOS booting. After the BIOS has booted and the operating system is responsible for the server , console redirection is irrelevant and has no effect. This can be one of the following: • disabled —No console redirection occurs du[...]
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Description Name What BAUD rate is used for the serial port transmission speed. If you disable Console Redirection, this option is not available. This can be one of the following: • 9600 —A 9600 BAUD rate is used. • 19200 —A 19200 BAUD rate is used. • 38400 —A 38400 BAUD rate is used. • 57600 —A 57600 BAUD rate is used. • 1 15200 [...]
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BIOS Policy The BIOS policy is a policy that automates the configuration of BIOS settings for a server or group of servers. Y ou can create global BIOS policies available to all servers in the root organization, or you can create BIOS policies in sub-organizations that are only available to that hierarchy . T o use a BIOS policy , do the following:[...]
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Page 439
Creating a BIOS Policy Cisco UCS Manager pushes BIOS configuration changes through a BIOS policy or default BIOS settings to the Cisco Integrated Management Controller (CIMC) buf fer . These changes remain in the buf fer and do not take effect until the server is rebooted. W e recommend that you verify the support for BIOS settings in the server th[...]
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Page 440
Modifying the BIOS Defaults W e recommend that you verify the support for BIOS settings in the server that you want to configure. Some settings, such as Mirroring Mode and Sparing Mode for RAS Memory , are not supported by all Cisco UCS servers. Unless a Cisco UCS implementation has specific needs that are not met by the server-specific settings, w[...]
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Page 441
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server for which you want to view the actual BIOS settings. Step 4 On the W ork pane, click the Inventory tab. Step 5 Click the Motherboard subtab. Step 6 In the BIOS Setti[...]
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Page 442
a) Enter a unique name and description for the profile. b) Click OK . Step 6 In the IPMI Profile Users area of the navigator , click + . Step 7 In the User Properties dialog box: a) Complete the following fields: Description Name The username to associate with this IPMI profile. Enter 1 to 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou can also use @ (at sign), [...]
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Page 443
Configuring Local Disk Configuration Policies Local Disk Configuration Policy This policy configures any optional SAS local drives that have been installed on a server through the onboard RAID controller of the local drive. This policy enables you to set a local disk mode for all servers that are associated with a service profile that includes the [...]
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Impact of Upgrade from a Release Prior to Release 1.3(1i) An upgrade from an earlier Cisco UCS firmware release to release 1.3(1i) or higher has the following impact on the Protect Configuration property of the local disk configuration policy the first time servers are associated with service profiles after the upgrade: Unassociated Servers After y[...]
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T o avoid this issue, ensure that the service profile you associate with the server contains the identical local disk configuration policy as the original service profile before the migration and does not include the Any Configuration mode. Configure RAID Settings in Local Disk Configuration Policy for Servers with MegaRAID Storage Controllers If a[...]
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Page 446
Creating a Local Disk Configuration Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy . If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Right-click Local Disk Confi[...]
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Description Name This can be one of the following local disk policy modes: • No Local Storage —For a diskless server or a SAN only configuration. If you select this option, you cannot associate any service profile which uses this policy with a server that has a local disk. • RAID 0 Striped —Data is striped across all disks in the array , pr[...]
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Page 448
Description Name If checked, the server retains the configuration in the local disk configuration policy even if the server is disassociated from the service profile. Protect Configuration becomes non-functional if one or more disks in the server are defective or faulty . Caution This property is checked by default. When a service profile is disass[...]
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Description Option Enables you to create a local disk configuration policy that can only be accessed by the selected service profile. Create a Local Disk Policy Does not use a local disk configuration policy for the selected service profile. No Disk Policy Step 8 Click OK . Step 9 (Optional) Expand the Local Disk Configuration Policy area to confir[...]
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BIOS Settings Scrub One of the following occurs to the BIOS settings when a service profile containing the scrub policy is disassociated from a server: • If enabled, erases all BIOS settings for the server and and resets them to the BIOS defaults for that server type and vendor • If disabled, preserves the existing BIOS settings on the server C[...]
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Step 6 Click OK . Deleting a Scrub Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand the Scrub Policies node. Step 4 Right-click the policy you want to delete and select Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirma[...]
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Description Name The name of the policy . This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field A description of the policy . W e recommend that you inclu[...]
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Configuring Server Autoconfiguration Policies Server Autoconfiguration Policy Cisco UCS Manager uses this policy to determine how to configure a new server . If you create a server autoconfiguration policy , the following occurs when a new server starts: 1 The qualification in the server autoconfiguration policy is executed against the server . 2 I[...]
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Description Name A description of the policy . W e recommend that you include information about where and when the policy should be used. Enter up to 256 characters. Y ou can use any characters or spaces except ^ (carat), (backslash), > (greater than), < (less than), ' (single quote), " (double quote), ` (accent mark), or = (equal[...]
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Configuring Server Discovery Policies Server Discovery Policy This discovery policy determines how the system reacts when you add a new server . If you create a server discovery policy , you can control whether the system conducts a deep discovery when a server is added to a chassis, or whether a user must first acknowledge the new server . By defa[...]
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What to Do Next Include the server discovery policy in a service profile and/or template. Deleting a Server Discovery Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Policies tab. Step 4 Click the Server Discovery Policies subtab. Ste[...]
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Page 457
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Policies tab. Step 4 Click the Server Inheritance Policies subtab. Step 5 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable i[...]
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Page 458
Configuring Server Pool Policies Server Pool Policy This policy is invoked during the server discovery process. It determines what happens if server pool policy qualifications match a server to the tar get pool specified in the policy . If a server qualifies for more than one pool and those pools have server pool policies, the server is added to al[...]
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Description Name If you want to associate this policy with one or more specific server pools, choose the server pool qualification policy that identifies these pools from the drop-down list. Qualification drop-down list Step 6 Click OK . Deleting a Server Pool Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Serv[...]
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• Server model Depending upon the implementation, you may configure several policies with server pool policy qualifications including the following: • Autoconfiguration policy • Chassis discovery policy • Server discovery policy • Server inheritance policy • Server pool policy Creating Server Pool Policy Qualifications Procedure Step 1 [...]
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b) In the Chassis Qualifications area of the Create Chassis and Server Qualifications dialog box, complete the following fields to specify the range of chassis you want to use: • First Chassis ID field—The first chassis ID from which server pools associated with this policy can draw . • Number of Chassis field—The total number of chassis to[...]
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Description Name The minimum memory capacity required, in megabytes. Min Cap field The maximum memory capacity allowed, in megabytes. Max Cap field The minimum width of the data bus. W idth field The unit of measure to associate with the value in the Width field. Units field c) Click OK . Step 10 (Optional) T o use this policy to qualify servers ac[...]
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c) Click OK . Step 11 (Optional) T o use this policy to qualify servers according to their storage configuration and capacity , do the following: a) Click Create Storage Qualifications . b) In the Create Storage Qualifications dialog box, complete the following fields: Description Name Whether the available storage must be diskless. This can be one[...]
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a) Click Create Power Gr oup Qualifications . b) In the Create Power Group Qualifications dialog box, choose a power gruup from the Power Group drop-down list. c) Click OK . Step 14 (Optional) T o use this policy to qualify the rack-mount servers that can be added to the associated server pool, do the following: a) Click Create Rack Qualifications [...]
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Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand the Server Pool Policy Qualifications node. Step 4 Choose the policy you want to modify . Step 5 In the W ork pane, choose the Qualifications tab. Step 6 T o delete a set of qualifications: a[...]
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Page 466
vCon to Adapter Placement Cisco UCS Manager maps every vCon in a service profile to a physical adapter on the server . How that mapping occurs and how the vCons are assigned to a specific adapter in a server with two adapters depends upon the type of server . Y ou must consider this placement when you configure the vNIC/vHBA placement policy to ass[...]
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Page 467
T o configure a vCon and the associated vNICs and vHBAs for explicit assignment, do the following: • Set the vCon configuration to any of the available options. Y ou can configure the vCons through a vNIC/vHBA placement policy or in the service profile associated with the server . If a vCon is configured for All , you can still explicitly assign [...]
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Page 468
Implicit Assignment of vNICs in a Mixed Adapter Environment The implicit assignment of vNICs functions dif ferently for a server that has mixed adapters, as follows: • A dual slot server that has one VIC adapter and one non-VIC adapter , which have different capabilities. For example, a server that contains a Cisco UCS M81KR V irtual Interface Ca[...]
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Page 469
dynamic vNICs and static vNICs, at least one static vNIC is assigned to the adapter that does not support dynamic vNICs. Creating a vNIC/vHBA Placement Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create [...]
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Page 470
Deleting a vNIC/vHBA Placement Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand the vNIC/vHBA Placement Policies node. Step 4 Right-click the policy you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays [...]
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Page 471
Description Name The user-specified virtual network interface connection (vCon) placement for the vNIC. This can be one of the following: • Any —Allows Cisco UCS Manager to determine the vCon to which the vNIC is assigned. • 1 —Explicitly assigns the vNIC to vCon1. • 2 —Explicitly assigns the vNIC to vCon2. • 3 —Explicitly assigns t[...]
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Page 472
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization which contains the service profile whose vHBAs you want to explicitly assign to a vCon. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Expand Servic[...]
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Page 473
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 OL-25712-04 437 Configuring vNIC/vHBA Placement Policies[...]
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Page 474
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 438 OL-25712-04 Configuring vNIC/vHBA Placement Policies[...]
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Page 475
CHAPTER 30 Configuring Server Boot This chapter includes the following sections: • Boot Policy , page 439 • Creating a Boot Policy , page 440 • SAN Boot, page 441 • iSCSI Boot, page 443 • LAN Boot, page 465 • Local Disk Boot, page 465 • V irtual Media Boot, page 466 • Deleting a Boot Policy , page 467 Boot Policy The boot policy det[...]
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Page 476
Creating a Boot Policy Y ou can also create a local boot policy that is restricted to a service profile or service profile template. However, except for iSCSI boot, we recommend that you create a global boot policy that can be included in multiple service profiles or service profile templates. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Serv[...]
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Page 477
• V irtual Media Boot —T o boot from virtual media that mimics the insertion of a physical CD or floppy drive into a server , continue with Configuring a V irtual Media Boot for a Boot Policy, on page 466 . What to Do Next Include the boot policy in a service profile and/or template. After a server is associated with a service profile that incl[...]
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Page 478
Before Y ou Begin If you are creating a boot policy that boots the server from a SAN LUN and you require reliable SAN boot operations, we recommend that you first remove all local disks from servers associated with a service profile that includes the boot policy . Note Procedure Step 1 Click the down arrows to expand the vHBAs area. Step 2 Click th[...]
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Page 479
Description Name This can be one of the following: • Primary —The first address defined for the associated boot device class. A boot policy can only have one primary LAN, SAN, or iSCSI boot location. • Secondary —The second address defined for the associated boot device class. Each boot policy can have only one secondary LAN or SAN boot loc[...]
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Page 480
iSCSI Boot Process The Cisco UCS Manager iSCSI vNIC and iSCSI boot information created for the service profile is used in the association process to program the mezzanine adapter , located on the blade server . After the adapter is programmed, the blade server reboots with the latest service profile values. After the power on self-test (POST), the [...]
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Page 481
Blades that use iSCSI boot must contain the Cisco UCS M51KR-B Broadcom BCM57711 network adapter . For information on installing or replacing an adapter card, see the Cisco UCS B250 ◦ Extended Memory Blade Server Installation and Service Note . The service note is accessible from the Cisco UCS B-Series Servers Documentation Roadmap at http://www .[...]
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Page 482
Enabling MPIO on Windows If you change the networking hardware, W indows may fail to boot from an iSCSI drive. For more information, see Microsoft support Article ID: 976042 . Note Before Y ou Begin The server on which you enable MPIO must have a Cisco VIC driver . Procedure Step 1 In the service profile associated with the server , configure the p[...]
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Page 483
Purpose Command or Action For more information about creating a boot policy that can be used in any service profile, see Creating an iSCSI Boot Policy, on page 451 . Create a boot policy that can be used in any service profile. Alternatively , you can create a local boot policy only for the specific service policy . However , we recommend that you [...]
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Page 484
Description Name The name of the policy . This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field The number of seconds to wait until Cisco UCS assumes that[...]
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Page 485
Deleting an iSCSI Adapter Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy . If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Expand the Adapter Policies node. Step[...]
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Page 486
Step 6 Click OK . What to Do Next Include the authentication profile in a service profile and/or template. Deleting an Authentication Profile Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy . If t[...]
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Page 487
Description Name The subnet mask associated with the IP addresses in the block. All IP addresses in the management IP pool must be in the same subnet as the IP address of the fabric interconnect. Subnet Mask field The default gateway associated with the IP addresses in the block. Default Gateway field Step 6 Click OK . What to Do Next Configure one[...]
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Page 488
This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Step 6 (Optional) T o reboot all servers that use this boot policy after you make changes to the boot order, ch[...]
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Page 489
Description Name The name of the iSCSI vNIC. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field The LAN vNIC associated with this iSCSI vNIC, if any . [...]
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Page 490
For more information, see Creating a MAC Pool, on page 295 . Deleting an iSCSI vNIC from a Service Profile Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile from which you want to delete an iS[...]
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Page 491
Description Name The name of the associated authentication profile. Authentication Profile drop-down list Click this link to create a new authentication profile policy that will be available to all iSCSI vNICs. Create Authentication Pr ofile link Step 10 In the Initiator Name area, complete the following fields: Description Name Select how the iSCS[...]
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Page 492
Description Option An IPv4 address is assigned to the iSCSI boot vNIC from the management IP address pool. Proceed to Step 13. Pool Step 12 If you chose Static from the Initiator IP Address Policy drop-down list, complete the following fields: Description Name The IPv4 address assigned to the iSCSI boot vNIC. If you want to specify this address, yo[...]
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Page 493
Description Name A regular expression that defines the iSCSI Qualified Name (IQN) or Extended Unique Identifier (EUI) name of the iSCSI target. Y ou can enter any alphanumeric characters as well as the following special characters: • . (period) • : (colon) • - (dash) This name must be properly formatted using standard IQN or EUI guidelines. I[...]
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Page 494
Modifying iSCSI Boot Parameters Y ou can modify iSCSI boot parameters, including the boot order , boot policy , authentication profile, initiator interface, and target interface for an iSCSI vNIC. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node [...]
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Page 495
Description Name Select how the iSCSI boot initiator name is assigned. Choose one of the following methods: • Manual —Y ou will enter a name in the Initiator Name field. The initiator name can contain up to 223 characters. • Pools —Choose an IQN suffix pool from which the name will be assigned. Initiator Name Assignment drop-down list Click[...]
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Page 496
Description Name The default gateway associated with the IPv4 address. Default Gateway field The primary DNS server address. Primary DNS field The secondary DNS server address. Secondary DNS field Step 13 For the iSCSI target interface, choose one of the following radio buttons: Description Option The system creates a static target interface that y[...]
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Page 497
Description Name The system-assigned priority for the iSCSI target. Priority field The port associated with the iSCSI target. Enter an integer between 1 and 65535. The default is 3260. Port field The name of the associated authentication profile. Authentication Profile drop-down list Click this link to create a new authentication profile policy tha[...]
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Page 498
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > Pools . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the pool. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Right-click IQN Pools and select Create IQN Suffix Pool . Step 5 In the Define Name and D[...]
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Page 499
Step 9 Click OK . Step 10 Click Finish to complete the wizard. What to Do Next • (Optional) Add additional blocks of IQN suffixes to the IQN pool. • Include the IQN suffix pool in a service profile and/or template. Adding a Block to an IQN Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > Po[...]
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Page 500
• The vNIC or vHBA is assigned to a different pool. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the SAN tab, expand SAN > Pools . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization containing the pool. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Expand the IQN Pools node. Step 5 Choose the IQN [...]
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Page 501
LAN Boot Y ou can configure a boot policy to boot one or more servers from a centralized provisioning server on the LAN. A LAN (or PXE) boot is frequently used to install operating systems on a server from that LAN server . Y ou can add more than one type of boot device to a LAN boot policy . For example, you could add a local disk or virtual media[...]
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Page 502
Configuring a Local Disk Boot for a Boot Policy Y ou can also create a local boot policy that is restricted to a service profile or service profile template. However, except for iSCSI boot, we recommend that you create a global boot policy that can be included in multiple service profiles or service profile templates. Y ou can add more than one typ[...]
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Page 503
V irtual Media requires the USB to be enabled. If you modify the BIOS settings that affect the USB functionality , you also affect the V irtual Media. Therefore, we recommend that you leave the following USB BIOS defaults for best performance: Note • Make Device Non Bootable—set to disabled • USB Idle Power Optimizing Setting—set to high-pe[...]
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Page 504
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 468 OL-25712-04 Deleting a Boot Policy[...]
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Page 505
CHAPTER 31 Deferring Deployment of Service Profile Updates This chapter includes the following sections: • Deferred Deployment of Service Profiles, page 469 • Configuring Schedules, page 472 • Configuring Maintenance Policies, page 482 • Managing Pending Activities, page 484 Deferred Deployment of Service Profiles Some modifications to a se[...]
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Page 506
If you want to defer the deployment of service profile changes, you must configure one or more maintenance policies and configure each service profile with a maintenance policy . If you want to define the time period when the deployment should occur , you also need to create at least one schedule with one or more recurring occurrences or one time o[...]
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Page 507
Pending Activities If you configure deferred deployment in a Cisco UCS domain, Cisco UCS Manager enables you to view all pending activities. Y ou can see activities that are waiting for user acknowledgement and those that have been scheduled. If a Cisco UCS domain has pending activities, Cisco UCS Manager GUI notifies users with admin privileges wh[...]
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Page 508
Cannot Perform Partial Deployment of Pending Activity Cisco UCS Manager applies all changes made to a service profile in the scheduled maintenance window . Y ou cannot make several changes to a service profile at the same time and then have those changes be spread across several maintenance windows. When Cisco UCS Manager deploys the service profil[...]
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Page 509
a) Complete the following fields: Description Name The name of the one time occurrence of this schedule. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name f[...]
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Page 510
Description Name The maximum number of tasks that can run concurrently during this occurrence. This can be one of the following: • Unlimited —Cisco UCS runs as many concurrent tasks as the system can handle. • other —Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a text field allowing you to specify the maximum number of concurrent tasks that can be run du[...]
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Page 511
Description Name The day on which Cisco UCS runs an occurrence of this schedule. This can be one of the following: • every day • Monday • T uesday • W ednesday • Thursday • Friday • Saturday • Sunday • odd days • even days Day field The hour of the specified day at which this occurrence of the schedule starts. This can be an int[...]
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Page 512
Description Name The maximum number of scheduled tasks that can be run during each occurrence. This can be one of the following: • Unlimited —Cisco UCS runs all scheduled tasks unless those tasks exceed the maximum time specified in the Max Duration field. If Max Duration is set to none and you select this option, the maintenance window continu[...]
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Page 513
Creating a One T ime Occurrence for a Schedule By default, the maximum duration and the maximum number of tasks are set to none . If you do not change either of these defaults, Cisco UCS Manager does not impose any limit to the length of time that the maintenance window lasts. All pending activities are applied as soon as the scheduled maintenance [...]
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Page 514
Description Name The maximum number of scheduled tasks that can be run during this occurrence. This can be one of the following: • Unlimited —Cisco UCS runs all scheduled tasks unless those tasks exceed the maximum time specified in the Max Duration field. If Max Duration is set to none and you select this option, the maintenance window continu[...]
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Page 515
Creating a Recurring Occurrence for a Schedule Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Schedules . Step 3 Right-click the schedule to which you want to add an occurrence and choose Cr eate a Recurring Occurrence . Step 4 In the Create a Recurring Occurr ence dialog box, complete the followin[...]
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Page 516
Description Name The minute of the hour at which the schedule occurrence starts. This can be an integer between 0 and 60. Minute field Step 5 Click the down arrows to expand the Options area. Step 6 In the Options area, complete the following fields: Description Name The maximum length of time that each occurrence of this schedule can run. This can[...]
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Page 517
Description Name The minimum length of time that the system should wait before starting a new task. This setting is meaningful only if the maximum number of concurrent tasks is set to a value other than none. This can be one of the following: • None —Cisco UCS runs the next task as soon as possible. • other —Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays t[...]
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Page 518
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Schedules > Schedule_Name . Step 3 Expand Recurring Occurrences . Step 4 Right-click the occurrence you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation dialog box, click Y es . Deleting a Schedule If th[...]
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Page 519
Description Name The name of the policy . This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field A description of the policy . W e recommend that you inclu[...]
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Page 520
Deleting a Maintenance Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies > Organization_Name . Step 3 Expand Maintenance Policies . Step 4 Right-click the maintenance policy you want to delete and choose Delete . Step 5 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmati[...]
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Page 521
Procedure Step 1 On the toolbar , click Pending Activities . Step 2 In the Pending Activities dialog box, click the User Acknowledged Activities tab. Step 3 In the Reboot Now column of the table, check the Acknowledge All check box for the pending activity you want to deploy immediately . Step 4 Click OK . Cisco UCS Manager immediately reboots the [...]
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Page 522
Procedure Step 1 On the toolbar , click Pending Activities . Step 2 In the Pending Activities dialog box, click the Scheduled Activities tab. Step 3 In the Reboot Now column of the table, check the Acknowledge All check box for the pending activity you want to deploy immediately . Step 4 Click OK . Cisco UCS Manager immediately reboots the server a[...]
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Page 523
CHAPTER 32 Configuring Service Profiles This chapter includes the following sections: • Service Profiles that Override Server Identity , page 487 • Service Profiles that Inherit Server Identity , page 488 • Service Profile T emplates, page 488 • Guidelines and Recommendations for Service Profiles, page 489 • Creating Service Profiles, pag[...]
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Page 524
Unless the service profile contains power management policies, a server pool qualification policy , or another policy that requires a specific hardware configuration, the profile can be used for any type of server in the Cisco UCS domain. Y ou can associate these service profiles with either a rack-mount server or a blade server . The ability to mi[...]
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Page 525
Initial template Service profiles created from an initial template inherit all the properties of the template. However , after you create the profile, it is no longer connected to the template. If you need to make changes to one or more profiles created from this template, you must change each profile individually . Updating template Service profil[...]
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Page 526
• Page 5: Setting the Server Boot Order, on page 504 • Page 6: Adding the Maintenance Policy, on page 507 • Page 7: Specifying the Server Assignment, on page 509 • Page 8: Adding Operational Policies, on page 511 Page 1: Identifying the Service Profile This procedure directly follows the steps in Creating a Service Profile with the Expert W[...]
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Page 527
Description Option Assigns a UUID from the UUID Suffix pool that you select from the list at the bottom of the drop-down list. Each pool name is followed by two numbers in parentheses that show the number of UUIDs still available in the pool and the total number of UUIDs in the pool. If you do not want use any of the existing pools, but instead wan[...]
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Page 528
Description Option Assigns the default local disk storage policy to this service profile. Continue with Step 4. Select Local Storage Policy to use Enables you to create a local disk policy that can only be accessed by this service profile. Continue with Step 2. Create a Specific Storage Policy Select an existing local disk policy from the list at t[...]
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Page 529
If you choose No RAID and you apply this policy to a server that already has an operating system with RAID storage configured, the system does not remove the disk contents. Therefore, there may be no visible differences on the server after you apply the No RAID mode. This can lead to a mismatch between the RAID configuration in the policy and the a[...]
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Page 530
Choose Select (pool default used by default) to use the default WWN pool. • • Choose one of the options listed under Manual Using OUI and then enter the WWN in the W orld Wide Node Name field. Y ou can specify a WWNN in the range from 20:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 20:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF or from 50:00:00:00:00:00:00:00 to 5F:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF .[...]
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Page 531
Description Name Check this check box if you want to use a template to create the vHBA. Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the vHBA T emplate drop-down list from which you can select the appropriate template, and the Adapter Performance Profile area from which you can select an adapter profile. Y ou can only select this option if one or more SAN connec[...]
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Page 532
Description Name This can be one of the following: • Disabled • Enabled Persistent Binding field The maximum size of the Fibre Channel frame payload bytes that the vHBA supports. Enter an integer between 256 and 21 12. The default is 2048. Max Data Field Size field Operational Parameters Section The threshold policy with which this vHBA is asso[...]
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Page 533
Procedure Step 1 (Optional) If you plan to assign this service profile to a server with an adapter that supports dynamic vNICs, choose one of the following options from the Dynamic vNIC Connection drop-down list: Description Option Enables you to create a service profile without a dynamic vNIC connection policy for a server with an adapter that doe[...]
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Page 534
e) Continue with Step 4. Step 4 In the How would you like to configure LAN connectivity? field, click one of the following options: Description Option Allows you to create a maximum of two vNICs, in dual fabric mode, for this service profile. Continue with Step 5. Simple Allows you to create an unlimited number of vNICs for this service profile. If[...]
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Page 535
Description Name Check this check box if you want to use a template to create the vNIC. Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the vNIC T emplate drop-down list from which you can select the appropriate template, and the Adapter Performance Profile area from which you can select an adapter profile. Y ou can only select this option if one or more LAN connec[...]
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Page 536
Description Name This table lists the VLANs that can be associated with this vNIC. The columns are: • Select —Check the check box in this column for each VLAN you want to use. • Name —The name of the VLAN. • Native VLAN —T o designate one of the VLANs as the native VLAN, click the radio button in this column. VLANs table Click this link[...]
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Page 537
Description Name Click this link if you want to create a network control policy . Create Network Contr ol Policy Policy link e) Click OK . Step 7 If you chose the expert LAN connectivity option and are configuring this service profile for iSCSI boot, do the following: a) Click the down arrows to expand the iSCSI vNICs bar . b) Click Add on the icon[...]
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Page 538
e) Repeat steps b through d to configure additional iSCSI vNICs. Step 8 Click Next . What to Do Next Complete Page 4: Setting the vNIC/vHBA Placement, on page 502 . Page 4: Setting the vNIC/vHBA Placement This procedure directly follows Page 3: Configuring the Networking Options, on page 496 . It describes how to set the vNIC and vHBA placement opt[...]
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Page 539
Description Name Moves the selected vNIC or VHBA to a higher priority in the list. Move Up button Moves the selected vNIC or vHBA to a lower priority in the list. Move Down button Deletes the selected vNIC or vHBA. Delete button Returns all vNICs and vHBAs to their original order . Reorder button Enables you to modify the currently-selected vNIC or[...]
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Page 540
All —All configured vNICs and vHBAs can be assigned to the vCon, whether they are explicitly assigned to it, unassigned, or dynamic. • • Assigned Only —vNICs and vHBAs must be explicitly assigned to the vCon. Y ou can assign them explicitly through the service profile or the properties of the vNIC or vHBA. • Exclude Dynamic —Dynamic vNI[...]
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Page 541
Description Option Enables you to create a local boot policy that can only be accessed by this service profile. Continue with Step 3. Create a Specific Boot Policy Assigns an existing boot policy to the service profile. If you choose this option, Cisco UCS Manager displays the details of the policy . If you do not want use any of the existing polic[...]
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Page 542
b) Click the Add LAN Boot link. c) In the Add LAN Boot dialog box, enter the name of the vNIC that you want to use for the LAN boot in the vNIC field, then click OK . d) Add another device to the Boot Order table, or click OK to finish. Step 7 T o add a SAN boot to the boot order , do the following: a) Click the down arrows to expand the vHBAs area[...]
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Page 543
Description Name This can be one of the following: • Primary —The first address defined for the associated boot device class. A boot policy can only have one primary LAN, SAN, or iSCSI boot location. • Secondary —The second address defined for the associated boot device class. Each boot policy can have only one secondary LAN or SAN boot loc[...]
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Page 544
Procedure Step 1 From the Maintenance Policy drop-down list, choose one of the following: Description Option Assigns the default maintenance policy to this service profile. Continue with Step 4. Select a Maintenance Policy to Use (default policy shown) Assigns an existing maintenance policy to the service profile. If you choose this option, Cisco U[...]
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Page 545
Description Name When a service profile is associated with a server , or when changes are made to a service profile that is already associated with a server , the server needs to be rebooted to complete the process. The Reboot Policy field determines when the reboot occurs for servers associated with any service profiles that include this maintenan[...]
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Page 546
Description Option Allows you to assign a server after you have created and configured the service profile. Continue with Step 6. Assign Later Specifies the chassis and slot that contains the server which will be assigned to the service profile. If the server is not in the slot or is otherwise unavailable, the service profile will be associated wit[...]
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Page 547
Description Name T o associate a host firmware package with this service profile, choose its name from the drop-down list. Host Firmware drop-down list Click this link if you want to create a host firmware package. Create Host Firmwar e Package link T o associate a management firmware package with this service profile, choose its name from the drop[...]
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Page 548
For more information about how to create an IPMI profile, see Creating an IPMI Access Profile, on page 405 . Step 4 T o add a Serial over LAN policy to the service profile, do one of the following: • T o add an existing policy , select the desired Serial over LAN policy from the SoL Configuration Profile drop-down list. • T o create a Serial ov[...]
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Page 549
Step 7 T o associate a power control policy with the service profile, click the down arrows to expand the Power Control Policy Configuration bar and do one of the following: • T o add an existing policy , select the desired power control policy from the Power Contr ol Policy drop-down list. • T o create a power control policy that is available [...]
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Page 550
Description Name Check this check box if you want to create a vNIC for this service profile. If you check this box, Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the rest of the fields in this section. Primary vNIC check box The name of the vNIC. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than[...]
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Page 551
Description Name The fabric interconnect that this vHBA is associated with. Do not associate the primary vHBA with the same fabric as the secondary vHBA. Fabric field Secondary vHBA Section Check this check box if you want to create a second vHBA for this service profile. If you check this box, Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the rest of the fields [...]
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Page 552
Description Name If T ype is set to san , this area contains the following fields: • vHBA —The vHBA used to access the SAN boot image • LUN —The LUN that corresponds to the location of the boot image • WWN —The WWN that corresponds to the location of the boot image SAN area If T ype is set to lan , this area contains the vNIC drop-down [...]
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Page 553
Creating a Hardware Based Service Profile for a Blade Server Y ou cannot move a hardware based service profile to another server . Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server for which you want to create a har[...]
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Page 554
a) From the Create Service Pr ofile in Organization drop-down list, select the organization in which you want to create the service profile. b) Click the Hardware Based Service Profile radio button. c) In the Name field, enter a unique name for the service profile. This name can be between 2 and 32 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or[...]
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Page 555
Page 1: Identifying the Service Profile T emplate This procedure directly follows the steps in Creating a Service Profile T emplate, on page 518 . It describes how to set the identity of a service profile template on the Identify Service Profile T emplate page of the Create Service Pr ofile T emplate wizard. Procedure Step 1 In the Name field, ente[...]
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Page 556
What to Do Next Complete the steps in Page 2: Specifying the Storage Options, on page 520 . Page 2: Specifying the Storage Options This procedure directly follows Page 1: Identifying the Service Profile T emplate, on page 519 . It describes how to configure the storage options for a service profile template on the Storage page of the Create Service[...]
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Page 557
• RAID 5 Striped Parity —Data is striped across all disks in the array . Part of the capacity of each disk stores parity information that can be used to reconstruct data if a disk fails. RAID 5 provides good data throughput for applications with high read request rates. • RAID 6 Striped Dual Parity —Data is striped across all disks in the a[...]
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Page 558
Description Option Does not include any vHBAs for connections to a Fibre Channel SAN in a service profile created from this template. If you are configuring this service profile/template for iSCSI boot, choose this option. Continue with Step 7. No vHBAs Step 5 (Optional) If you chose the simple SAN storage option, do the following: a) From the WWNN[...]
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Page 559
Description Name The name of this vHBA. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field Check this check box if you want to use a template to create[...]
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Page 560
Description Name Click this link if you want to create a pin group. Create SAN Pin Gr oup link This can be one of the following: • Disabled • Enabled Persistent Binding field The maximum size of the Fibre Channel frame payload bytes that the vHBA supports. Enter an integer between 256 and 21 12. The default is 2048. Max Data Field Size field Op[...]
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Page 561
Procedure Step 1 (Optional) If you plan to assign service profiles created from this template to a server with an adapter that supports dynamic vNICs, choose one of the following options from the Dynamic vNIC Connection drop-down list: Description Option Enables you to create a service profile template without a dynamic vNIC connection policy for a[...]
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Page 562
e) Continue with Step 4. Step 4 In the How would you like to configure LAN connectivity? field, click one of the following options: Description Option Allows you to create a maximum of two vNICs, in dual fabric mode, for every service profile created from this template. Continue with Step 5. Simple Allows you to create an unlimited number of vNICs [...]
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Page 563
Description Name Check this check box if you want to use a template to create the vNIC. Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the vNIC T emplate drop-down list from which you can select the appropriate template, and the Adapter Performance Profile area from which you can select an adapter profile. Y ou can only select this option if one or more LAN connec[...]
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Page 564
Description Name This table lists the VLANs that can be associated with this vNIC. The columns are: • Select —Check the check box in this column for each VLAN you want to use. • Name —The name of the VLAN. • Native VLAN —T o designate one of the VLANs as the native VLAN, click the radio button in this column. VLANs table Click this link[...]
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Page 565
Description Name Click this link if you want to create a network control policy . Create Network Contr ol Policy Policy link e) Click OK . Step 7 If you chose the expert LAN connectivity option and are configuring this service profile for iSCSI boot, do the following: a) Click the down arrows to expand the iSCSI vNICs bar . b) Click Add on the icon[...]
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Page 566
e) Repeat steps b through d to create additional iSCSI vNICs. Step 8 Click Next . What to Do Next Complete Page 4: Setting the vNIC/vHBA Placement, on page 530 . Page 4: Setting the vNIC/vHBA Placement This procedure directly follows Page 3: Specifying the Networking Options, on page 524 . It describes how to set the vNIC and vHBA placement options[...]
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Page 567
a) Use one or more of the following buttons to adjust the order of the vNICs and vHBAs: Description Name Moves the selected vNIC or VHBA to a higher priority in the list. Move Up button Moves the selected vNIC or vHBA to a lower priority in the list. Move Down button Deletes the selected vNIC or vHBA. Delete button Returns all vNICs and vHBAs to th[...]
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Page 568
b) In the Selection Prefer ence column for each V irtual Slot , choose one of the following from the drop-down list: • All —All configured vNICs and vHBAs can be assigned to the vCon, whether they are explicitly assigned to it, unassigned, or dynamic. • Assigned Only —vNICs and vHBAs must be explicitly assigned to the vCon. Y ou can assign [...]
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Page 569
Description Option Enables you to create a local boot policy that can only be accessed by a service profile created from this template. Continue with Step 3. Create a Specific Boot Policy Assigns an existing boot policy to every service profile created from this template. If you choose this option, Cisco UCS Manager displays the details of the poli[...]
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Page 570
b) Click the Add LAN Boot link. c) In the Add LAN Boot dialog box, enter the name of the vNIC that you want to use for the LAN boot in the vNIC field, then click OK . d) Add another device to the Boot Order table, or click OK to finish. Step 7 T o add a SAN boot to the boot order , do the following: a) Click the down arrows to expand the vHBAs area[...]
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Page 571
Description Name This can be one of the following: • Primary —The first address defined for the associated boot device class. A boot policy can only have one primary LAN, SAN, or iSCSI boot location. • Secondary —The second address defined for the associated boot device class. Each boot policy can have only one secondary LAN or SAN boot loc[...]
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Page 572
Procedure Step 1 From the Maintenance Policy drop-down list, choose one of the following: Description Option Assigns the default maintenance policy to this service profile. Continue with Step 4. Select a Maintenance Policy to Use (default policy shown) Assigns an existing maintenance policy to the service profile. If you choose this option, Cisco U[...]
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Page 573
Description Name When a service profile is associated with a server , or when changes are made to a service profile that is already associated with a server , the server needs to be rebooted to complete the process. The Reboot Policy field determines when the reboot occurs for servers associated with any service profiles that include this maintenan[...]
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Page 574
Procedure Step 1 From the Pool Assignment drop-down list, choose one of the following: Description Option Allows you to assign a server after you have created and configured the service profile template. Continue with Step 2. Assign Later Select a server pool from the list at the bottom of the drop-down list. Cisco UCS Manager assigns a server from[...]
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Page 575
Step 5 Click Next . What to Do Next Complete Page 8: Adding Operational Policies, on page 539 . Page 8: Adding Operational Policies This procedure directly follows Page 7: Specifying the Server Assignment Options, on page 537 . It describes how to add operational policies to the service profile template on the Operational Policies page of the Creat[...]
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Page 576
For more information about how to create a serial over LAN policy , see Creating a Serial over LAN Policy, on page 415 . Step 5 T o configure the management IP required for external access to the CIMC on the server , click the down arrows to expand the Management IP Address bar and click one of the following radio buttons: • None —No management[...]
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Page 577
Creating One or More Service Profiles from a Service Profile T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profile T emplates . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile template that you want to use as the basis for your service p[...]
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Page 578
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server for which you want to create a template based service profile. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Create Service Pr o[...]
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Page 579
Creating a Service Profile T emplate from a Service Profile Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile that you want to use as the basis for your template. If the system does not includ[...]
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Page 580
Managing Service Profiles Cloning a Service Profile Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the service profile. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Rig[...]
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Page 581
Description Option Select a server pool from the drop-down list. Cisco UCS Manager assigns a server from this pool to the service profile. Continue with Step 7. Server Pool Navigate to the desired available server in the navigation tree and select the server which will be assigned to the service profile. Continue with Step 7. Server Specifies the c[...]
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Page 582
Step 4 Right-click the service profile you want to disassociate from a server and select Disassociate Service Pr ofile . Step 5 In the Disassociate Service Profile dialog box, click Y es to confirm that you want to disassociate the service profile. Step 6 (Optional) Monitor the status and FSM for the server to confirm that the disassociation comple[...]
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Page 583
Disassociating a Service Profile T emplate from its Server Pool Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profile T emplates . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile that you want to disassociate from its server pool. If the system do[...]
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Page 584
Description Option Uses the UUID assigned to the server by the manufacturer . If you choose this option, the UUID remains unassigned until the service profile is associated with a server . At that point, the UUID is set to the UUID value assigned to the server by the manufacturer . If the service profile is later moved to a different server , the U[...]
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Page 585
Step 4 Choose the service profile template whose UUID assignment you want to change. Step 5 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 6 In the Actions area, click Change UUID . Step 7 From the UUID Assignment drop-down list, choose one of the following: Description Option Assigns a UUID from the default UUID Suffix pool. Select (pool default u[...]
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Page 586
Step 4 Choose the service profile that requires the UUID for the associated server to be reset to a different UUID suffix pool. Step 5 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 6 In the Actions area, click Reset UUID . If this action is not visible, then the UUID configuration in the service profile does not meet the requirements for resetting[...]
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Page 587
This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Step 9 (Optional) T o reboot all servers that use this boot policy after you make changes to the boot order, ch[...]
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Page 588
Description Name This can be one of the following: • Primary —The first address defined for the associated boot device class. A boot policy can only have one primary LAN, SAN, or iSCSI boot location. • Secondary —The second address defined for the associated boot device class. Each boot policy can have only one secondary LAN or SAN boot loc[...]
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Page 589
Creating a vNIC for a Service Profile Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile for which you want to create a vNIC. Step 4 Expand the service profile for which you want to create a vN[...]
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Page 590
b) Complete the following fields to specify the fabric connection information: Description Name The fabric interconnect associated with the component. If you want this vNIC to be able to access the second fabric interconnect if the default one is unavailable, check the Enable Failover check box. Do not enable fabric failover for the vNIC under the [...]
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Page 591
Description Name The statistics collection policy with which this vNIC is associated. Stats Thr eshold Policy drop-down list c) In the Adapter Performance Profile area, complete the following fields: Description Name The Ethernet adapter policy with which this vNIC is associated. Adapter Policy drop-down list Click this link if you want to create a[...]
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Page 592
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile for which you want to reset the MAC address. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Expand Service_Profile[...]
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Page 593
a) Complete the following fields to specify the identity information for the vHBA: Description Name The name of this vHBA. This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has [...]
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Page 594
Description Name The pin group with which this vHBA is associated. Pin Group drop-down list box Click this link if you want to create a pin group. Create SAN Pin Gr oup link This can be one of the following: • Disabled • Enabled Persistent Binding field The maximum size of the Fibre Channel frame payload bytes that the vHBA supports. Enter an i[...]
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Page 595
Changing the WWPN for a vHBA Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile for which you want to change the WWPN. Step 4 Expand Service_Profile_Name > vHBAs . Step 5 Click the vHBA for [...]
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Page 596
Resetting the WWPN Assigned to a vHBA from a Pool in a Service Profile T emplate If you change the WWPN pool assigned to an updating service profile template, Cisco UCS Manager does not change the WWPN assigned to a service profile created with that template. If you want Cisco UCS Manager to assign a WWPN from the newly assigned pool to the service[...]
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Page 597
Deleting a vHBA from a Service Profile Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that contains the service profile from which you want to delete a vHBA. Step 4 Expand the service profile from which you want to delete a[...]
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Page 598
Unbinding a Service Profile from a Service Profile T emplate Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization that includes the service profile you want to unbind. If the system does not include multi-tenancy , expand the roo[...]
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Page 599
CHAPTER 33 Managing Power in Cisco UCS This chapter includes the following sections: • Power Management in Cisco UCS , page 563 • Rack Server Power Management, page 563 • Power Management Precautions, page 563 • Configuring the Power Policy , page 564 • Configuring the Global Cap Policy , page 564 • Configuring Policy-Driven Chassis Gro[...]
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Page 600
Configuring the Power Policy Power Policy The power policy is a global policy that specifies the redundancy for power supplies in all chassis in the Cisco UCS domain. This policy is also known as the PSU policy . For more information about power supply redundancy , see Cisco UCS 5108 Server Chassis Har dwar e Installation Guide . Configuring the Po[...]
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Page 601
Any change to the manual blade-level power cap configuration will result in the loss of any groups or configuration options set for policy-driven chassis group power capping. Important Configuring the Global Cap Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In [...]
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Page 602
The system reserves enough power to boot a server in each slot, even if that slot is empty . This reserved power cannot be leveraged by servers requiring more power . Blades that fail to comply with the power cap are penalized or shut down. Note Configuring Power Groups Power Groups A power group is a set of chassis that all draw power from the sam[...]
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Page 603
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Policies tab. Step 4 Click the Power Groups subtab. Step 5 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable it. Step 6 On th[...]
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Page 604
Adding a Chassis to a Power Group Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Equipment node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Power Groups tab. Step 4 Right-click the power group to which you want to add a chassis and choose Add Chassis Members . Step 5 In the Add Chassis Members dial[...]
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Page 605
Configuring Power Control Policies Power Control Policy Cisco UCS uses the priority set in the power control policy , along with the blade type and configuration, to calculate the initial power allocation for each blade within a chassis. During normal operation, the active blades within a chassis can borrow power from idle blades within the same ch[...]
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Page 606
Description Name What happens to a server when the demand for power within a power group exceeds the power supply . This can be one of the following: • No Cap —The server runs at full capacity regardless of the power requirements of the other servers in its power group. • cap —The server is allocated a minimum amount of power capacity based[...]
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Page 607
The following configuration options are available: Enabled Y ou can specify the maximum amount of power that the server can consume at one time. This maximum can be any amount between 0 watts and 1 100 watts. Disabled No power usage limitations are imposed upon the server . The server can use as much power as it requires. If the server encounters a[...]
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Page 608
Step 6 Click Save Changes . Viewing the Blade-Level Power Cap Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis . Step 3 Choose the chassis for which you want to view the server power usage. Step 4 Do one of the following: • T o view the power usage for all servers in the [...]
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Page 609
P ART VI System Management • Managing T ime Zones, page 575 • Managing the Chassis, page 577 • Managing Blade Servers, page 585 • Managing Rack-Mount Servers, page 599 • Starting the KVM Console, page 611 • Managing the I/O Modules, page 617 • Backing Up and Restoring the Configuration, page 619 • Recovering a Lost Password, page 63[...]
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[...]
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CHAPTER 34 Managing T ime Zones This chapter includes the following sections: • T ime Zones, page 575 • Setting the T ime Zone, page 575 • Adding an NTP Server , page 576 • Deleting an NTP Server , page 576 T ime Zones Cisco UCS requires a domain-specific time zone setting and an NTP server to ensure the correct time display in Cisco UCS Ma[...]
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Page 612
Adding an NTP Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 In the Admin tab, expand All . Step 3 Click Timezone Management . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the NTP Servers area, click the + button on the table icon bar . Step 6 In the Add NTP Server dialog box, do the following: a) In the N[...]
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Page 613
CHAPTER 35 Managing the Chassis This chapter includes the following sections: • Chassis Management in Cisco UCS Manager GUI , page 577 • Guidelines for Removing and Decommissioning Chassis, page 577 • Acknowledging a Chassis, page 578 • Decommissioning a Chassis, page 579 • Removing a Chassis, page 579 • Recommissioning a Single Chassis[...]
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Page 614
Removing a Chassis Removing is performed when you physically remove a chassis from the system. Once the physical removal of the chassis is completed, the configuration for that chassis can be removed in Cisco UCS Manager. Y ou cannot remove a chassis from Cisco UCS Manager if it is physically present and connected. Note If you need to add a removed[...]
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Page 615
Decommissioning a Chassis Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis . Step 3 Choose the chassis that you want to decommission. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Decommission Chassis . Step 6 If Cisco UCS Manager GUI di[...]
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Page 616
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 In the Equipment tab, expand the Equipment node. Step 3 Click the Chassis node. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the Decommissioned tab. Step 5 For the chassis that you want to recommission, do the following: a) Right-click the chassis and choose Re-commission Chassis . b) In t[...]
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Page 617
Renumbering a Chassis Y ou cannot renumber a blade server through Cisco UCS Manager. The ID assigned to a blade server is determined by its physical slot in the chassis. T o renumber a blade server , you must physically move the server to a different slot in the chassis. Note Before Y ou Begin If you are swapping IDs between chassis, you must first[...]
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Page 618
T oggling the Locator LED T urning on the Locator LED for a Chassis Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis . Step 3 Click the chassis that you need to locate. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click T urn on Locator LED .[...]
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Page 619
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis . Step 3 Choose the chassis for which you want to view the POST results. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click V iew POST Results . The POST Results dialog box lists the POST resul[...]
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Page 620
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 584 OL-25712-04 Viewing the POST Results for a Chassis[...]
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Page 621
CHAPTER 36 Managing Blade Servers This chapter includes the following sections: • Blade Server Management, page 585 • Guidelines for Removing and Decommissioning Blade Servers, page 586 • Booting Blade Servers, page 586 • Shutting Down Blade Servers, page 588 • Resetting a Blade Server , page 589 • A voiding Unexpected Server Power Chan[...]
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Page 622
The remaining management tasks can only be performed on the server . If a blade server slot in a chassis is empty , Cisco UCS Manager provides information, errors, and faults for that slot. Y ou can also reacknowledge the slot to resolve server mismatch errors and to have Cisco UCS Manager rediscover the blade server in the slot. Guidelines for Rem[...]
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Page 623
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server that you want to boot. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Boot Server . Step 6 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays [...]
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Page 624
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Click the server for which you want to determine the boot order . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 If the Boot Order Details area is not expanded, click the Exp[...]
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Page 625
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the service profile. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Choose the service profile that requires the associated[...]
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Page 626
The reset may take several minutes to complete. After the server has been reset, the Overall Status field on the General tab displays an ok status. A voiding Unexpected Server Power Changes If a server is not associated with a service profile, you can use any available means to change the server power state, including the physical Power or Reset bu[...]
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Page 627
Server Power State After Communication Is Disrupted Current Server Power State Desired Power State in Service Profile Powered On Running servers are not shut down regardless of the desired power state in the service profile. Note Powered On Down Reacknowledging a Blade Server Perform the following procedure if you need to have Cisco UCS Manager red[...]
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Page 628
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server that you want to remove from the chassis. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Server Maintenance . Step 6 In the Maint[...]
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Page 629
For more information, see Reacknowledging a Server Slot in a Chassis, on page 593 . Recommissioning a Blade Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Chassis node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Decommissioned tab. Step 4 On the row for each blade server that you want to rec[...]
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Page 630
Removing a Non-Existent Blade Server from the Configuration Database Perform the following procedure if you physically removed the server hardware without first decommissioning the server . Y ou cannot perform this procedure if the server is physically present. If you want to physically remove a server , see Removing a Server from a Chassis, on pag[...]
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Page 631
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server for which you want to reset the CMOS. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Recover Server . Step 6 In the Recover Serve[...]
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Page 632
Before Y ou Begin Remove all attached or mapped USB storage from a server before you attempt to recover the corrupt BIOS on that server . If an external USB drive is attached or mapped from vMedia to the server , BIOS recovery fails. Important Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equi[...]
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Page 633
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server for which you want to view the POST results. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click V iew POST Results . The POST Results[...]
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Page 634
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 598 OL-25712-04 Issuing an NMI from a Blade Server[...]
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Page 635
CHAPTER 37 Managing Rack-Mount Servers This chapter includes the following sections: • Rack-Mount Server Management, page 599 • Guidelines for Removing and Decommissioning Rack-Mount Servers, page 600 • Booting Rack-Mount Servers, page 600 • Shutting Down Rack-Mount Servers, page 602 • Resetting a Rack-Mount Server , page 603 • A voidin[...]
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Page 636
be performed from both the server and service profile. The remaining management tasks can only be performed on the server . Cisco UCS Manager provides information, errors, and faults for each rack-mount server that it has discovered. For information about how to integrate a supported Cisco UCS rack-mount server with Cisco UCS Manager, see the hardw[...]
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Page 637
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Rack Mounts > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server that you want to boot. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click Boot Server . Step 6 If the Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays a confirmation d[...]
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Page 638
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Rack Mounts > Servers . Step 3 Click the server for which you want to determine the boot order . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 If the Boot Order Details area is not expanded, click the Expand icon to the [...]
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Page 639
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab. Step 2 On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Service Profiles . Step 3 Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the service profile. If the system does not include multitenancy , expand the root node. Step 4 Choose the service profile that requires the associated[...]
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Page 640
The reset may take several minutes to complete. After the server has been reset, the Overall Status field on the General tab displays an ok status. A voiding Unexpected Server Power Changes If a server is not associated with a service profile, you can use any available means to change the server power state, including the physical Power or Reset bu[...]
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Page 641
Server Power State After Communication Is Disrupted Current Server Power State Desired Power State in Service Profile Powered On Running servers are not shut down regardless of the desired power state in the service profile. Note Powered On Down Reacknowledging a Rack-Mount Server Perform the following procedure if you need to have Cisco UCS Manage[...]
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Page 642
a) Click Decommission . b) Click OK . The server is removed from the Cisco UCS configuration. Recommissioning a Rack-Mount Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, click the Rack-Mounts node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Decommissioned tab. Step 4 On the row for each rack-mount ser[...]
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Page 643
Step 4 Choose the rack-mount server that you want to renumber . Step 5 On the Equipment tab, click the Rack-Mounts node. Step 6 In the W ork pane, click the Decommissioned tab. Step 7 On the row for each rack-mount server that you want to renumber , do the following: a) Double-click in the ID field, and enter the new number that you want to assign [...]
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Page 644
• T urn on Locator LED • T urn off Locator LED Resetting the CMOS for a Rack-Mount Server On rare occasions, troubleshooting a server may require you to reset the CMOS. This procedure is not part of the normal maintenance of a server . Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipmen[...]
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Page 645
Recovering the Corrupt BIOS on a Rack-Mount Server On rare occasions, an issue with a server may require you to recover the corrupted BIOS. This procedure is not part of the normal maintenance of a server . After you recover the BIOS, the server boots with the running version of the firmware for that server . This radio button may be dimmed if the [...]
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Page 646
V iewing the POST Results for a Rack-Mount Server Y ou can view any errors collected during the Power On Self-T est process for a server and its adapters. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Rack Mounts > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server for which you want to view[...]
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Page 647
CHAPTER 38 Starting the KVM Console This chapter includes the following sections: • KVM Console, page 611 • Starting the KVM Console from a Server , page 615 • Starting the KVM Console from a Service Profile , page 615 • Starting the KVM Console from the KVM Launch Manager , page 615 KVM Console The KVM console is an interface accessible fr[...]
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Page 648
network share to a virtual drive, the installation may be even slower because the installation files must be downloaded from the network to the KVM console (your computer) and then from the KVM console to the server . When using this installation method, we recommend that you have the installation media as close as possible to the system with the K[...]
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Page 649
Description Name Opens the Open dialog box that lets you navigate to the local folder that you want to map on the server . After the system has created the image, it saves the IMG file on your desktop and adds it to the Client V iew table. Check the check box in the Mapped column to complete the mapping process. Create Image button Opens the Open d[...]
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Page 650
Description Menu Item Resizes the console window to the minimum size needed to display the video image from the server . This option is only available if the console is in W indowed mode. Fit Macros Menu on the KVM T ab Select the keyboard shortcut you want to execute on the remote system. T ools Menu on the KVM T ab Description Menu Item Opens the[...]
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Page 651
Starting the KVM Console from a Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Choose the server that you want to access through the KVM console. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, [...]
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Page 652
Before Y ou Begin T o access the KVM console for a server through the KVM Launch Manager , you need the following: • Cisco UCS username and password. • Name of the service profile associated with the server for which you want KVM access. Procedure Step 1 In your web browser , type or select the web link for Cisco UCS Manager GUI. Example: The d[...]
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Page 653
CHAPTER 39 Managing the I/O Modules This chapter includes the following sections: • I/O Module Management in Cisco UCS Manager GUI , page 617 • Resetting an I/O Module, page 617 • V iewing the POST Results for an I/O Module, page 617 I/O Module Management in Cisco UCS Manager GUI Y ou can manage and monitor all I/O modules in a Cisco UCS doma[...]
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Page 654
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > IO Modules . Step 3 Choose the I/O module for which you want to view the POST results. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the Actions area, click V iew POST Results . The POST [...]
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Page 655
CHAPTER 40 Backing Up and Restoring the Configuration This chapter includes the following sections: • Backup and Export Configuration, page 619 • Backup T ypes, page 619 • Considerations and Recommendations for Backup Operations, page 620 • Import Configuration, page 621 • Import Methods, page 621 • System Restore, page 621 • Required[...]
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Page 656
• All configuration —An XML file that includes all system and logical configuration settings. Y ou can use the file generated from this backup to import these configuration settings to the original fabric interconnect or to a different fabric interconnect. Y ou cannot use this file for a system restore. This file does not include passwords for [...]
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Page 657
Import Configuration Y ou can import any configuration file that was exported from Cisco UCS Manager. The file does not need to have been exported from the same Cisco UCS Manager. The import function is available for all configuration, system configuration, and logical configuration files. Y ou can perform an import while the system is up and runni[...]
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Page 658
Backup Operations Creating a Backup Operation Before Y ou Begin Obtain the backup server IP address and authentication credentials. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 Click the All node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 4 In the Actions area, click Backup . Step 5 In the Backup Configuration di[...]
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Page 659
Description Name The information saved in the backup configuration file. This can be one of the following: • Full state —A binary file that includes a snapshot of the entire system. Y ou can use the file generated from this backup to restore the system during disaster recovery . This file can restore or rebuild the configuration on the original[...]
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Page 660
Description Name The protocol to use when communicating with the remote server . This can be one of the following: • FTP • TFTP • SCP • SFTP Protocol field The hostname or IP address of the location where the backup file is stored. This can be a server , storage array , local drive, or any read/write media that the fabric interconnect can a[...]
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Page 661
Running a Backup Operation Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 Click the All node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 4 In the Actions area, click Backup . Step 5 In the Backup Operations table of the Backup Configuration dialog box, click the backup operation that you want to run. The details of [...]
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Page 662
The details of the selected backup operation display in the Pr operties area. If the backup operation is in a disabled state, the fields are dimmed. Step 6 In the Admin State field, click the enabled radio button. Step 7 Modify the appropriate fields. Y ou do not have to enter the password unless you want to run the backup operation immediately . S[...]
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Page 663
• Logical configuration Before Y ou Begin Collect the following information that you will need to import a configuration file: • Backup server IP address and authentication credentials • Fully qualified name of a backup file Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 Click the All node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, clic[...]
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Page 664
Description Name Where the backup file that you want to import is located. This can be one of the following: • Remote File System —The backup XML file is stored on a remote server . Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the fields described below that allow you to specify the protocol, host, filename, username, and password for the remote system. • [...]
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Page 665
a) If the operation does not automatically display in the Pr operties area, click the operation in the Import Operations table. b) In the Properties area, click the down arrows on the FSM Details bar . The FSM Details area expands and displays the operation status. Step 10 Click OK to close the Import Configuration dialog box. The import operation [...]
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Page 666
Modifying an Import Operation Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 Click the All node. Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 4 In the Actions area, click Import Configuration . Step 5 In the Import Operations area of the Import Configuration dialog box, click the import operation that you want to modi[...]
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Page 667
Description Option Deletes the selected import operations and closes the dialog box. OK Restoring the Configuration for a Fabric Interconnect Before Y ou Begin Collect the following information that you will need to restore the system configuration: • Fabric interconnect management port IP address and subnet mask • Default gateway IP address ?[...]
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Page 668
• FTP • SFTP Step 9 In the Server Information area, complete the following fields: Description Name The IP address of the computer where the full state backup file is located. This can be a server , storage array , local drive, or any read/write media that the fabric interconnect can access through the network. Server IP The file path where the[...]
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Page 669
CHAPTER 41 Recovering a Lost Password This chapter includes the following sections: • Recovering a Lost Password, page 633 Recovering a Lost Password Password Recovery for the Admin Account The admin account is the system administrator or superuser account. If an administrator loses the password to this account, you can have a serious security is[...]
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Page 670
Determining the Leadership Role of a Fabric Interconnect Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 In the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Fabric Interconnects . Step 3 Click the fabric interconnect for which you want to identify the role. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the General tab. Step 5 In the General tab,[...]
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Page 671
• The firmware system version T o find this information, you can log in with any user account on the Cisco UCS domain. T ip Procedure Step 1 Connect to the console port. Step 2 Power cycle the fabric interconnect: a) T urn off the power to the fabric interconnect. b) Turn on the power to the fabric interconnect. Step 3 In the console, press one o[...]
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Page 672
Example: Fabric(boot)# load /installables/switch/ ucs-6100-k9-system.4.1.3.N2.1.0.211.bin Step 9 After the system image loads, log in to Cisco UCS Manager. Recovering the Admin Account Password in a Cluster Configuration This procedure will help you to recover the password that you set for the admin account when you performed an initial system setu[...]
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Page 673
Ctrl+l • • Ctrl+Shift+r Y ou may need to press the selected key combination multiple times before your screen displays the loader prompt. Step 5 Boot the kernel firmware version on the primary fabric interconnect. loader > boot /installables/switch/ kernel_firmware_version Example: loader > boot /installables/switch/ ucs-6100-k9-kickstart[...]
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Page 674
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 638 OL-25712-04 Recovering a Lost Password[...]
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Page 675
P ART VII System Monitoring • Monitoring T raffic, page 641 • Monitoring Hardware, page 647 • Configuring Statistics-Related Policies, page 663 • Configuring Call Home, page 675 • Managing the System Event Log, page 695 • Configuring Settings for Faults, Events, and Logs, page 701[...]
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Page 676
[...]
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Page 677
CHAPTER 42 Monitoring T raffic This chapter includes the following sections: • T raffic Monitoring, page 641 • Guidelines and Recommendations for Traf fic Monitoring, page 642 • Creating an Ethernet T raffic Monitoring Session, page 643 • Creating a Fibre Channel T raffic Monitoring Session, page 644 • Adding T raffic Sources to a Monitor[...]
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Page 678
• Service profile vHBA • FCoE port • Port channels • Server port A Fibre Channel traffic monitoring session can monitor any of the following traf fic sources: • Uplink Fibre Channel port • SAN port channel • VSAN • Service profile vHBA • Fibre Channel storage port Guidelines and Recommendations for T raffic Monitoring When configu[...]
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Page 679
• If a traffic monitoring session was configured on a dynamic vNIC under a release earlier than Cisco UCS Manager Release 2.0, you must reconfigure the traf fic monitoring session after upgrading. T raffic monitoring can impose a significant load on your system resources. T o minimize the load, select sources that carry as little unwanted traffic[...]
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Page 680
Step 5 Click OK . What to Do Next • Add traffic sources to the traffic monitoring session. • Activate the traffic monitoring session. Creating a Fibre Channel T raffic Monitoring Session Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the SAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand SAN > T raffic Monitoring Sessions > Fabric_Interconnect_Name .[...]
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Page 681
Step 5 Click OK . What to Do Next • Add traffic sources to the traffic monitoring session. • Activate the traffic monitoring session. Adding T raffic Sources to a Monitoring Session Y ou can choose multiple sources from more than one source type to be monitored by a traffic monitoring session. The available sources depend on the components conf[...]
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Page 682
Activating a T raffic Monitoring Session This procedure describes how to activate an Ethernet traffic monitoring session. T o activate a Fibre Channel monitoring session, select the SAN tab instead of the LAN tab in Step 2. Note Before Y ou Begin A traffic monitoring session must be created. Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN ta[...]
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Page 683
CHAPTER 43 Monitoring Hardware This chapter includes the following sections: • Monitoring a Fabric Interconnect, page 647 • Monitoring a Chassis, page 648 • Monitoring a Blade Server , page 650 • Monitoring a Rack-Mount Server , page 652 • Monitoring an I/O Module, page 654 • Monitoring Management Interfaces, page 655 • Server Disk Dr[...]
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Page 684
Description Option Displays the status of all ports on the fabric interconnect. This tab includes the following subtabs: • Uplink Ports tab • Server Ports tab • Fibre Channel Ports tab • Unconfigured Ports tab Physical Ports tab Displays the status of all fan modules in the fabric interconnect. Fans tab Displays the status of all power supp[...]
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Page 685
Description Option Displays the status and selected properties of all servers in the chassis. Servers tab Displays the status of the service profiles associated with servers in the chassis. Service Profiles tab Displays the status and selected properties of all IO modules in the chassis. IO Modules tab Displays the status of all fan modules in the [...]
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Page 686
Monitoring a Blade Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Click the server that you want to monitor . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click one of the following tabs to view the status of the server: Description Option Pr[...]
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Page 687
Description Option Provides details about the properties and status of the components of the server on the following subtabs: • Motherboard —Information about the motherboard and information about the server BIOS settings. Y ou can also recover corrupt BIOS firmware from this subtab. • CIMC —Information about the CIMC and its firmware, and [...]
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Page 688
Description Option Displays an overview of the events generated by the server . Y ou can click any event to view additional information. Events tab Provides details about the current FSM task running on the server , including the status of that task. Y ou can use this information to diagnose errors with those tasks. FSM tab Displays statistics abou[...]
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Page 689
Description Option Provides details about the properties and status of the components of the server on the following subtabs: • Motherboard —Information about the motherboard and information about the server BIOS settings. Y ou can also recover corrupt BIOS firmware from this subtab. • CIMC —Information about the CIMC and its firmware, and [...]
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Page 690
Description Option Displays an overview of the events generated by the server . Y ou can click any event to view additional information. Events tab Provides details about the current FSM task running on the server , including the status of that task. Y ou can use this information to diagnose errors with those tasks. FSM tab Displays statistics abou[...]
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Page 691
Description Option Displays the status and selected properties of all fabric ports in the I/O module. Fabric Ports tab Displays the status and selected properties of all backplane ports in the I/O module. Backplane Ports tab Provides details of faults generated by the I/O module. Faults tab Provides details of events generated by the I/O module. Ev[...]
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Page 692
In the event of a management interface failure on a fabric interconnect, the managing instance may not change if one of the following occurs: Important • A path to the end-point through the subordinate fabric interconnect does not exist. • The management interface for the subordinate fabric interconnect has failed. • The path to the end-point[...]
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Page 693
Description Name The type of monitoring you want the system to use. This can be one of the following: • Mii Status —The system monitors the availability of the Media Independent Interface (MII). If you select this option, Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the Media Independent Interface Monitoring area. • Ping Arp T argets —The system pings de[...]
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Page 694
Description Name The number of seconds to wait for responses from the ARP targets until the system assumes they are unavailable. Enter an integer between 5 and 15. Max Deadline Timeout field T ype 0.0.0.0 to remove the ARP target. Step 8 If you chose Ping Gateway for the monitoring mechanism, complete the following fields in the Gateway Ping Monito[...]
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Page 695
Supported Cisco UCS Servers Through Cisco UCS Manager, you can monitor disk drives for the following servers: • B-200 blade server • B-230 blade server • B-250 blade server • B-440 blade server Cisco UCS Manager cannot monitor disk drives in any other blade server or rack-mount server . Storage Controller Firmware Level The storage controll[...]
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Page 696
Description Name The operational state of the disk drive. This can be the following: • Operable —The disk drive is operable. • Inoperable —The disk drive is inoperable, possibly due to a hardware issue such as bad blocks. • N/A —The operability of the disk drive cannot be determined. This could be due to the server or firmware not being[...]
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Page 697
Interpretation Presence Status Operability Status Fault condition. The disk drive is in the server , but one of the following could be causing an operability problem: • The disk drive is unusable due to a hardware issue such as bad blocks. • There is a problem with the IPMI link to the storage controller . Equipped Inoperable Fault condition. T[...]
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Page 698
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 662 OL-25712-04 Server Disk Drive Monitoring[...]
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Page 699
CHAPTER 44 Configuring Statistics-Related Policies This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring Statistics Collection Policies, page 663 • Configuring Statistics Threshold Policies, page 666 Configuring Statistics Collection Policies Statistics Collection Policy A statistics collection policy defines how frequently statistics are[...]
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Page 700
Modifying a Statistics Collection Policy Cisco UCS Manager has one default statistics collection policy for each of the five functional areas. Y ou cannot create additional statistics collection policies and you cannot delete the existing default policies. Y ou can only modify the default policies. Note Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, clic[...]
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Page 701
Description Name The length of time the fabric interconnect should wait before sending any data collected for the counter to Cisco UCS Manager. This can be one of the following: • 2 Minutes • 15 Minutes • 30 Minutes • 60 Minutes • 2 Hours • 4 Hours • 8 Hours When this time has elapsed, the fabric interconnect groups all data collected[...]
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Page 702
Configuring Statistics Threshold Policies Statistics Threshold Policy A statistics threshold policy monitors statistics about certain aspects of the system and generates an event if the threshold is crossed. Y ou can set both minimum and maximum thresholds. For example, you can configure the policy to raise an alarm if the CPU temperature exceeds a[...]
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Page 703
Description Name The name of the policy . This name can be between 1 and 16 alphanumeric characters. Y ou cannot use spaces or any special characters other than - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon), and . (period), and you cannot change this name after the object has been saved. Name field A description of the policy . W e recommend that you inclu[...]
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Page 704
• Critical g) In the Up and Down fields, enter the range of values that should trigger the alarm. h) Click Finish Stage . i) Do one of the following: • T o define another threshold property for the class, repeat Step 7. • If you have defined all required properties for the class, click Finish Stage . Step 8 In the Threshold Classes page of th[...]
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Page 705
• Major • Minor • W arning • Condition • Info e) In the Up and Down fields, enter the range of values that should trigger the alarm. f) In the Alarm T riggers (Below Normal V alue) field, check one or more of the following check boxes: • Info • Condition • W arning • Minor • Major • Critical g) In the Up and Down fields, enter[...]
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Page 706
Adding a Threshold Class to the Uplink Ethernet Port Threshold Policy Y ou cannot create an uplink Ethernet port threshold policy . Y ou can only modify or delete the default policy . T ip Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the LAN tab. Step 2 On the LAN tab, expand LAN > LAN Cloud . Step 3 Expand the Threshold Policies node. Step 4 [...]
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Page 707
• Critical g) In the Up and Down fields, enter the range of values that should trigger the alarm. h) Click Finish Stage . i) Do one of the following: • T o define another threshold property for the class, repeat Step 6. • If you have defined all required properties for the class, click Finish Stage . Step 7 In the Create Thr eshold Class page[...]
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Page 708
• Minor • W arning • Condition • Info e) In the Up and Down fields, enter the range of values that should trigger the alarm. f) In the Alarm T riggers (Below Normal V alue) field, check one or more of the following check boxes: • Info • Condition • W arning • Minor • Major • Critical g) In the Up and Down fields, enter the range[...]
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Page 709
b) Click Next . Step 6 In the Threshold Definitions page, do the following: a) Click Add . The Create Thr eshold Definition dialog box opens. b) From the Property T ype field, choose the threshold property that you want to define for the class. c) In the Normal V alue field, enter the desired value for the property type. d) In the Alarm T riggers ([...]
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Page 710
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 674 OL-25712-04 Configuring Statistics Threshold Policies[...]
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CHAPTER 45 Configuring Call Home This chapter includes the following sections: • Call Home, page 675 • Call Home Considerations and Guidelines, page 677 • Cisco UCS Faults and Call Home Severity Levels, page 678 • Cisco Smart Call Home, page 679 • Configuring Call Home, page 680 • Disabling Call Home, page 683 • Enabling Call Home, pa[...]
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Page 712
• Short text format which provides a one or two line description of the fault that is suitable for pagers or printed reports. • Full text format which provides fully formatted message with detailed information that is suitable for human reading. • XML machine readable format that uses Extensible Markup Language (XML) and Adaptive Messaging La[...]
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Page 713
The following figure shows the flow of events after a Cisco UCS fault is triggered in a system with Call Home configured: Figure 2: Flow of Events after a Fault is T riggered Call Home Considerations and Guidelines How you configure Call Home depends on how you intend to use the feature. The information you need to consider before you configure Cal[...]
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Page 714
Destination Profile Y ou must configure at least one destination profile. The destination profile or profiles that you use depend upon whether the receiving entity is a pager , email, or automated service such as Cisco Smart Call Home. If the destination profile uses email message delivery , you must specify a Simple Mail T ransfer Protocol (SMTP) [...]
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Page 715
Call Home Meaning Cisco UCS Fault Call Home Severity Critical conditions, immediate attention needed. Critical (6) Critical Major conditions. Major (5) Major Minor conditions. Minor (4) Minor W arning conditions. W arning (3) W arning Basic notifications and informational messages. Possibly independently insignificant. Info (2) Notification Normal [...]
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Page 716
• Configure the contact information. • Configure the email information. • Configure the SMTP server information. • Configure the default CiscoT AC-1 profile. • Send a Smart Call Home inventory message to start the registration process. • Ensure that the CCO ID you plan to use as the Call Home Customer ID for the Cisco UCS domain has the[...]
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Page 717
Description Name Whether the system limits the number of duplicate messages received for the same event. This can be one of the following: • On —If the number of duplicate messages sent exceeds 30 messages within a 2-hour time frame, then the system discards further messages for that alert type. • Off —The system sends all duplicate message[...]
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Page 718
Description Name The email address for the main contact. Cisco Smart Call Home sends the registration email to this email address. If an email address includes special characters, such as # (hash), spaces, or & (ampersand), the email server may not be able to deliver email messages to that address. Cisco recommends that you use email addresses [...]
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Page 719
Description Name The IP address or hostname of the SMTP server . If you use a hostname rather than an IP address, you must configure a DNS server in Cisco UCS Manager. Note Host field The port number the system should use to talk to the SMTP server . Enter an integer between 1 and 65535. The default is 25. Port field Step 9 Click Save Changes . Dis[...]
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Page 720
What to Do Next Ensure that Call Home is fully configured. Configuring System Inventory Messages Configuring System Inventory Messages Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Call Home . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the System Inventory tab. Step 4 In th[...]
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Page 721
The system inventory message is sent only to those recipients defined in CiscoT AC-1 profile. Note Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Call Home . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the System Inventory tab. Step 4 In the Actions area, click Send System In[...]
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Page 722
Creating a Call Home Profile By default, you must configure the Cisco T AC-1 profile. However , you can also create additional profiles to send email alerts to one or more specified groups when events occur at the level that you specify . Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communic[...]
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Page 723
Description Name The group or groups that are alerted based on this Call Home profile. This can be one or more of the following: • Cisco T ac • Diagnostic • Environmental • Inventory • License • Life Cycle • Linecard • Supervisor • Syslog Port • System • T est Alert Groups field Step 6 In the Email Configuration area, complete[...]
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Page 724
Step 7 In the Recipients area, do the following to add one or more email recipients for the email alerts: a) On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . b) In the Add Email Recipients dialog box, enter the email address to which Call Home alerts should be sent in the Email field. After you save this email address, it can be deleted but it [...]
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Page 725
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Call Home . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Policies tab. Step 4 On the icon bar to the right of the table, click + . If the + icon is disabled, click an entry in the table to enable it. Step 5 In the Create Call [...]
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Page 726
Enabling a Call Home Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Call Home . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Policies tab. Step 4 Click the policy that you want to enable and choose Show Navigator . Step 5 In the State field, click Enabled . Step 6 C[...]
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Page 727
• Alerts • Critical • Debugging • Emergencies • Errors • Information • Notifications • W arnings Step 5 In the Contact Information area, complete the following fields with the required contact information: Description Name The main Call Home contact person. Enter up to 255 ASCII characters. Contact field The telephone number for the[...]
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Page 728
Step 7 In the Email Addresses area, complete the following fields with the email information for Smart Call Home alert messages: Description Name The email address that should appear in the From field on Call Home alert messages sent by the system. From field The return email address that should appear in the From field on Call Home alert messages [...]
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Page 729
Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > Call Home . Step 3 In the W ork pane, click the Profiles tab. Step 4 Right-click the Cisco T AC-1 profile and choose Recipient . Step 5 In the Add Email Recipients dialog box, do the following: a) In the Email field, [...]
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Page 730
Description Name The date and time for the upcoming data collection. This field is displayed after the first inventory has been sent. Note Next Scheduled field Step 5 Click Save Changes . Registering Smart Call Home Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Communication Management > C[...]
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Page 731
CHAPTER 46 Managing the System Event Log This chapter includes the following sections: • System Event Log, page 695 • V iewing the System Event Log for an Individual Server , page 696 • V iewing the System Event Log for the Servers in a Chassis, page 696 • Configuring the SEL Policy , page 696 • Managing the System Event Log for a Server [...]
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Page 732
V iewing the System Event Log for an Individual Server Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab. Step 2 On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers . Step 3 Click the server for which you want to view the system event log. Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the SEL Logs tab. Cisco UCS Ma[...]
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Page 733
Description Name The protocol to use when communicating with the remote server . This can be one of the following: • FTP • TFTP • SCP • SFTP Protocol field The hostname or IP address of the server on which the backup configuration resides. If you use a hostname rather than an IP address, you must configure a DNS server in Cisco UCS Manager.[...]
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Page 734
Description Name The username the system should use to log in to the remote server . This field does not apply if the protocol is TFTP . User field The password for the remote server username. This field does not apply if the protocol is TFTP . Password field For each box that is checked, then the system creates a SEL backup when that event is enco[...]
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Page 735
Printing the System Event Log This task assumes that you are viewing the system event log for a server from the SEL Logs tab for a server or a chassis. Procedure Step 1 After Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the system event log in the SEL Logs tab, click Print . Step 2 In the Print dialog box, do the following: a) (Optional) Modify the default print[...]
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Page 736
Procedure After Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the system event log in the SEL Logs tab, click Clear . This action triggers an automatic backup if Clear is enabled in the SEL policy Action option box. Note Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 700 OL-25712-04 Managing the System Event Log for a Server[...]
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Page 737
CHAPTER 47 Configuring Settings for Faults, Events, and Logs This chapter includes the following sections: • Configuring Settings for the Fault Collection Policy , page 701 • Configuring Settings for the Core File Exporter , page 703 • Configuring the Syslog, page 704 Configuring Settings for the Fault Collection Policy Fault Collection Polic[...]
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Page 738
Configuring the Fault Collection Policy Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Faults, Events, and Audit Log . Step 3 Click Settings . Step 4 In the W ork pane, complete the following fields in the Fault Collection Policy area: Description Name Flapping occurs when a fault is raised an[...]
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Page 739
Configuring Settings for the Core File Exporter Core File Exporter Cisco UCS Manager uses the Core File Exporter to export core files as soon as they occur to a specified location on the network through TFTP . This functionality allows you to export the tar file with the contents of the core file. Configuring the Core File Exporter Procedure Step 1[...]
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Page 740
Disabling the Core File Exporter Procedure Step 1 In the Navigation pane, click the Admin tab. Step 2 On the Admin tab, expand All > Faults, Events, and Audit Log . Step 3 Click Settings . Step 4 In the W ork pane, click the Settings tab. Step 5 In the TFTP Core Exporter area, click the disabled radio button in the Admin State field. Step 6 Clic[...]
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Page 741
Description Name This can be one of the following: • Enabled • Disabled If Admin State is enabled, Cisco UCS Manager GUI displays the rest of the fields in this section. Admin State field If the Admin State field is enabled , select the lowest message level that you want displayed. The system displays that level and above on the monitor . This [...]
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Page 742
Description Name Select the lowest message level that you want the system to store. The system stores that level and above in a file on the fabric interconnect. This can be one of the following: • Emergencies • Alerts • Critical • Errors • W arnings • Notifications • Information • Debugging Level drop-down list The name of the file [...]
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Page 743
Description Name Select the lowest message level that you want the system to store. The system stores that level and above in the remote file. This can be one of the following: • Emergencies • Alerts • Critical • Errors • W arnings • Notifications • Information • Debugging Level drop-down list The hostname or IP address on which the[...]
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Page 744
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0 708 OL-25712-04 Configuring the Syslog[...]
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Page 745
INDEX A accounts 159, 160, 162, 171, 176, 177, 179, 180 admin 160 creating user 171 deleting local 177 disabling 176 enabling 176 expiration 160 locally authenticated 160, 177, 179, 180 remotely authenticated 160 user 159, 162 username guidelines 160 acknowledging 578, 591, 605 blade servers 591 chassis 578 rack-mount servers 605 activate firmware [...]
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Page 746
autoconfiguration policy 25, 417, 418 about 25, 417 creating 417 deleting 418 Automatically Reconnect 57 B backing up 200, 619, 620, 621, 622, 625, 626, 696, 699 about 619 considerations 620 creating operations 200, 622 deleting operation 626 modifying operations 625 running operations 200, 625 system event log 696, 699 manual 699 scheduled 696 typ[...]
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Page 747
boot policies (continued) LAN boot 465 local disk boot 465, 466 SAN boot 441 virtual media boot 466 boot process 444 iSCSI 444 bootflash, available space 209 booting 586, 587, 600, 601 blade servers 586 determining boot order 587, 601 rack-mount servers 600 servers from service profile 587, 601 bronze system class 37, 298 bundles, firmware 184 burn[...]
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Page 748
CIMC (continued) Management IP (continued) service profiles 376 resetting 595, 608 updating firmware 215 Cisco Discovery Protocol 23, 317, 318 Cisco T AC-1 profile, configuring 692 Cisco UCS Manager 43, 47, 196 about 43 GUI 47 impact of firmware upgrade 196 Cisco VM-FEX 41 cisco-av-pair 132 CiscoA VPair 132 clearing licenses 256 clearing system eve[...]
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Page 749
disabling (continued) communication services 129 Core File Exporter 704 port channels 269 ports 88, 112 server ports 266 uplink Ethernet port channels 99 uplinkEthernet ports 267 disassociating servers 545 disaster recovery 619, 621 discovery policy 16, 25, 239, 242, 244, 419, 420 chassis 16, 239, 242 rack server 25, 244 server 25, 419, 420 disjoin[...]
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Page 750
exporting (continued) user role 621 external applications 59 F fabric 108 port channels 108 fabric failover 318 fabric interconnects 46, 65, 66, 67, 69, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 86, 87, 88, 89, 196, 202, 209, 219, 220, 221, 247, 248, 252, 253, 255, 256, 334, 341, 631, 633, 634, 636, 647 admin password recover 634, 636 admin password recovery 633 ava[...]
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Page 751
Fibre Channel adapter policies 19, 312, 358, 359, 364 about 19, 312, 358 creating 359 deleting 364 Fibre Channel switching 95 default zoning 95 Fibre Channel switching mode 74 about 74 Fibre Channel system class 37, 298 fields, acceptable range 60 filtering tables 51 finding acceptable range 60 firmware 21, 22, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 190, 19[...]
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Page 752
H hard reset 589, 603 blade servers 589 rack-mount servers 603 hardware based service profiles 517 hardware-based service profiles 14, 488 hardware, stateless 38 headers, images 185 high availability 10, 46, 66, 69, 71, 202 about 46 fabric interconnect failover 66 initial setup 69, 71 verifying status 202 high availability configuration 46 about 46[...]
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Page 753
IP addresses (continued) management IP pool 33, 377 management port 66 IP pools 33, 377, 378, 450 creating IP address block 378 creating iSCSI initiator address block 450 management 33, 377 IPMI access profiles 21, 405, 406 about 21, 405 creating 405 deleting 406 IQN pools 461, 463, 464 about 461 adding a block 463 creating 461 deleting 464 deletin[...]
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Page 754
LAN Uplinks Manager (continued) named VLANs (continued) deleting 274 pin groups 270, 271 creating 270 deleting 271 port channels 267, 268, 269, 270 adding ports 269 creating 267 deleting 270 disabling 269 enabling 268 removing ports 270 system classes, configuring 274 unconfiguring server ports 266 unconfiguring uplink Ethernet ports 267 lanes, vir[...]
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Page 755
M MAC address table 245 aging time, about 245 configuring aging time 245 MAC addresses 31, 295, 296 creating pools 295 deleting pools 296 pools 31, 295 MAC pools 295, 296 creating 295 deleting 296 MAC sync 66 main, BIOS settings 382 maintenance policies 29, 470, 472, 482, 484 about 29, 470 creating 482 deleting 484 schedules 472, 482 management 577[...]
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Page 756
network (continued) named VSANs 96, 97, 333, 335, 337, 339 deleting 339 disabling default zoning 97 enabling default zoning 96 private VLANs 278 network control policy 23, 317, 318, 320 creating 318 deleting 320 networks, disjoint L2 321 NIC adapters 41 virtualization 41 NMI 597, 610 blade servers 597 rack-mount servers 610 noAuthNoPriv 122 NTP ser[...]
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Page 757
PCI configuration, BIOS settings 395 pending activities 471, 484, 485, 486 about 471 deploying 484, 485, 486 viewing 484 persistent binding, clearing 560 PFC 11 pin groups 35, 270, 271, 293, 294, 343, 344 about 35 LAN 270, 271, 293, 294 SAN 343, 344 pinning 35, 36, 323 about 35 disjoint L2 networks 323 guidelines 36 servers to server ports 35 PKI 1[...]
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Page 758
port channels (continued) Ethernet 99, 100 adding ports 99 deleting 100 disabling 99 removing ports 99 fabric 108, 110 Fibre Channel 104, 105, 106, 107 adding ports 106 creating 104, 105 deleting 107 disabling 106 modifying 106 removing ports 106 removing from VLANs 328 removing ports 270 uplink Ethernet 97, 98, 99 creating 98 enabling 99 viewing V[...]
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Page 759
primary authentication (continued) RADIUS provider 142, 144 remote 131 selecting console 151 selecting default 152 T ACACS provider 146 T ACACS+ provider 145 primary VLAN 285 printing system event log 699 priority flow control 11 private VLANs 278, 285, 288 about 278 creating primary 285 creating secondary 288 privileges 164, 168 about 164 adding 1[...]
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Page 760
RADIUS provider (continued) creating 142 deleting 144 groups 148 creating 148 deleting 148 user attribute 132 RAID configurations, local disk configuration policies 408 range restrictions, VSAN IDs 334 range, acceptable 60 RAS memory , BIOS settings 392 reacknowledging 591, 593, 605 blade servers 591 rack-mount servers 605 server slots 593 rebootin[...]
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Page 761
SAN boot (continued) configuring 441 SAN pin groups 343, 344 creating 343 deleting 344 scalability 10 schedules 470, 472, 477, 479, 481, 482 about 470 creating 472 deleting 482 one time occurrences 477, 481 creating 477 deleting 481 recurring occurrences 479, 481 creating 479 deleting 481 scrub policy 29, 413, 414, 415 about 29, 413 creating 414 de[...]
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Page 762
servers (continued) changing UUID 547 cloning service profiles 544 configuration 12 creating service profile templates 518, 519 creating service profiles 489, 490, 513 decommissioning 592, 605 disassociating from service profiles 545 discovery policy 25, 419, 420 disk drive monitoring 658, 659 disk drive status 659, 660 disk drive support 658 DNS 2[...]
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Page 763
service profiles (continued) adding firmware packages 229 associating 544 binding to template 561 changing UUID 547 cloning 544 configuration 12 creating from template 541 creating hardware based 517 blade servers 517 rack-mount servers 517 creating template based 541, 542 blade servers 541 rack-mount servers 542 creating template from 543 creating[...]
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Page 764
stateless computing 38, 39 about 38 opt-in 39 opt-out 39 statelessness 38 statistics 30, 666, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672 threshold policies 30, 666, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672 Ethernet server port 671 Fibre Channel port 672 server and server component 666, 668, 669 uplink Ethernet port 670 statistics collection policies 30, 663, 664 about 30, 663 modifyi[...]
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Page 765
traffic management (continued) quality of service 37, 297 system classes 37, 297 virtual lanes 37, 297 traffic monitoring 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646 about 641 activating a session 646 adding sources 645 deleting a session 646 Ethernet session 643 Fibre Channel session 644 guidelines 642 traps 122, 126, 127 about 122 creating 126 deleting 127 trun[...]
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Page 766
uplink port channels (continued) Ethernet (continued) enabling 99 removing ports 270 uplink ports 29, 38, 77, 85, 97, 270, 271, 293, 294, 304, 343, 344 about 77 Ethernet 85 flow control policies 29, 38, 304 pin groups 270, 271, 293, 294, 343, 344 creating 270, 293 deleting 271, 294 port channels 97 uplink Ethernet 97 uplink trunking 334, 341 Fibre [...]
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Page 767
vHBA templates (continued) deleting 357 unbinding vHBAs 358 vHBAs 357, 358, 430, 435, 556, 559, 560, 561 assignment to vCon 430, 435 binding to vHBA template 357 changing WWPN 559 clearing persistent binding 560 creating for service profiles 556 deleting from service profiles 561 resetting WWPN 560 unbinding from vHBA template 358 VIC adapters 41 v[...]
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Page 768
WWN (continued) deleting (continued) WWPN pools 353 WWN block 347, 351 adding to WWNN pool 347 adding to WWPN pool 351 deleting from WWNN pool 347 deleting from WWPN pool 351 WWN pools 32, 345 about 32, 345 WWNN initiators 348, 349 adding to WWNN pool 348 deleting 349 WWNN pools 32, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349 about 32, 345 adding WWN block 347 adding [...]