Symbolic name, Switch administrative states, Broadcast support – HP H-series Enterprise Fabric Management Suite Software User Manual

Page 95: In-band management, Fabric device management interface

Advertising
background image

HP StorageWorks 8/20q and SN6000 Fibre Channel Switch Enterprise Fabric Management Suite User Guide

95

Symbolic name

The symbolic name is a user-defined name of up to 32 characters that identifies the switch. The symbolic

name is used in the displays and data windows to help identify switches. The following characters may not

be used in the symbolic name: pound sign (#), semi-colon (;), and comma (,).

Switch administrative states

The switch administrative state determines the operational state of the switch. The switch administrative

state exists in two forms: configured administrative state and current administrative state.
The configured administrative state is the state that is saved in the switch configuration and is preserved

across switch resets. Enterprise Fabric Management Suite always makes changes to the configured

administrative state. The configured administrative state appears in the Switch Properties dialog box.
The current administrative state is the state that is applied to the switch for temporary purposes and is not

retained across switch resets. The current administrative state is set using the Set Switch command. For

information about the command line interface, see the HP StorageWorks 8/20q Fibre Channel Switch

Command Line Interface Guide or the HP StorageWorks SN6000 Fibre Channel Switch Command Line

Interface Guide.
The switch administrative state values are:

Online—Switch is available.

Offline—Switch is unavailable.

Diagnostics—Switch is in diagnostics mode, is unavailable, and tests can be run on all ports of the

switch.

Broadcast support

Broadcast is supported on the switch and enables TCP/IP support. Broadcast is implemented using the

proposed standard specified in Multi-Switch Broadcast for FC-SW-3, T11 Presentation Number

T11/02-031v0. Fabric Shortest Path First (FSPF) is used to set up a fabric spanning tree used in transmission

of broadcast frames. Broadcast frames are retransmitted on all ISLs indicated in the spanning tree and all

online N_Ports and NL_Ports. Broadcast zoning is supported with zones. The default setting is Enabled.

In-band management

In-band management is the ability to manage switches across inter-switch links. Enterprise Fabric

Management Suite, SNMP, management server, and the application programming interface use the

in-band management capability. The switch comes from the factory with in-band management enabled. If

you disable in-band management on a particular switch, you can no longer communicate with that switch

by means other than a direct Ethernet or serial connection.

Fabric device management interface

Fabric Device Management Interface (FDMI) provides a means to gather and display device information

from the fabric and enables FDMI-capable devices to register certain information with the fabric, when

FDMI is Enabled. Enterprise Fabric Management Suite reports any and all FDMI information reported by

the entry switch, if FDMI is enabled on the entry switch. To view FDMI data, FDMI must be enabled on the

entry switch and on all other switches in the fabric which are to report FDMI data.
FDMI is comprised of the fabric-to-device interface and the application-to-fabric interface. The

fabric-to-device interface enables a device’s management information to be registered. The

application-to-fabric interface provides the framework by which an application obtains device information

from the fabric. Use the FDMI HBA Entry Limit field on the Switch Properties dialog box to configure the

maximum number of HBAs that can be registered with a switch. If the number of HBAs exceeds the

maximum number, the FDMI information for those HBAs cannot be registered.
Select the FDMI Enabled option on the Switch Properties dialog box to enable or disable FDMI. If FDMI is

enabled on an HBA, the HBA forwards information about itself to the switch when the HBA logs into the

switch. If FDMI is Enabled on a switch, the switch stores the HBA information in its FDMI database.

Disabling FDMI on a switch clears the FDMI database. If you disable FDMI on a switch and then re-enable

it, you must reset the ports to cause the HBAs to log in again, and thus forward HBA information to the

switch.

Advertising