Hosts file, Manually editing the hosts file – Dell Emulex Family of Adapters User Manual

Page 89

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OneCommand™ Manager Application

P010066-01A Rev. A

5. Configuring Discovery

Discovery Using the TCP/IP Access Protocol

89

You can manage many more hosts since TCP/IP access is not constrained by the

boundaries of a fabric or zoning.

True board status (such as link down) is available since the FC path is not

necessary to send a status request to the remote host.

Adapter security in a TCP/IP environment is much more important since many

more hosts are available for management, and TCP/IP access is not affected by

fabrics or zoning.

Discovery of hosts in a TCP/IP environment is not automatic like FC discovery.

You must add the hosts to be managed.

Using TCP/IP, you can add multiple IP addresses for the same host. However,

only one of the IP addresses is used by OneCommand Manager application to

manage the adapters on that host.

Hosts File

The TCP/IP discovery function of the OneCommand Manager application discovery

server relies on a file called the hosts file. This plain text file contains a list of hosts the

utility attempts to discover. The discovery server does not attempt to discover hosts

over TCP/IP through any other mechanisms (such as ping sweeps and broadcasts).
The hosts file is automatically created or modified when you perform any of the

following operations:

Adding a single host from the Add Remote Host window. If the host is

discovered, the OneCommand Manager application adds its IP address and

name to the host file.

Scanning a range of IP addresses for hosts that can be managed. This function is

performed in the Add Remote Hosts window. For each discovered host, the

OneCommand Manager application adds its IP address and name to the host

file.

Removing a host from the host file using the Remove Remote Hosts window.

For each removed host, the OneCommand Manager application removes its IP

address and name from the host file.

Adding or removing a host using the CLI.

Manually Editing the Hosts File

You can open the hosts file with any text editor, modify the contents and save the file.

The name of the host file is “hbahosts.lst”. Once the file is modified and saved, the

updated file is used after the next TCP/IP discovery cycle is complete. If the discovery

server is running, it does not need to be restarted.
To manually edit the hosts file:
1. Locate and open the hosts file.

Windows – The file is located on the system drive in the directory “\Program

Files\Emulex\Util”.

Solaris – The file is located in the directory “/opt/ELXocm”.

Linux – The file is located in the directory “/usr/sbin/ocmanager”.

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