Dell DR4300 DR Series System Administrator Guide - Page 30

Setting Up the DR Series System Hardware, Interacting with the DR Series System

Page 30 highlights

3 Setting Up the DR Series System Hardware You can interact with the DR Series system hardware using one of two supported methods: a web-based graphical user interface (GUI) accessed using a web browser or a command line interface (CLI) using a terminal emulator application (for example, PuTTY). Before you can interact with your system, you must first, however, ensure that the DR Series system is properly set up. NOTE: The topics in this section apply to physical DR Series systems. For information about setting up the virtual DR Series system, DR2000v, see the Dell DR2000v Deployment Guide for your specific VM platform and the Dell DR Series System Interoperability Guide. For more information on the DR Series system CLI commands, see the Dell DR Series System Command Line Reference Guide. Refer to the following topics for information about setting up the DR Series system hardware. Interacting with the DR Series System You interact with the DR Series system by using a web-based graphical user interface (GUI) through a browser-based connection. The DR Series system GUI provides a single, comprehensive data management interface that lets you create new data containers, modify or delete existing containers, and perform a number of data-related operations using its features and settings. NOTE: A second method for interacting with the DR Series system is by using its command-line interface (CLI) via a terminal emulator application (for example, PuTTY). You can create and manage containers that are the repositories where you store your backup and deduplicated data. A data container is a shared file system that is imported using a client, and is accessible via file system protocols. For details, see Supported File System Protocols. A data container can also be a virtual tape library (VTL) type container. The DR Series system provides real-time summary tables, detail tables, and graphs that let you monitor the status of the data capacity, storage savings, and the throughput of the containers you are managing using its set of GUI features. Networking Preparations for the DR Series System Before you can start using the DR Series system, ensure that you have satisfied the following networking prerequisites: • Network: An active network is available using Ethernet cables and connections. NOTE: If your DR Series system is equipped with a 1-GbE NIC, Dell recommends using CAT6 (or CAT6a) copper cabling. If your DR Series system is equipped with a 10-GbE NIC, Dell recommends using CAT6a copper cabling. NOTE: If your DR Series system is equipped with a 10-GbE enhanced small form-factor pluggable (SFP+) NIC, you must use Dell-supported SFP+ LC fiber-optic transceivers or twin-axial cabling. • IP Addresses: You need to make sure to have IP addresses that you use for the DR Series system. The DR Series system ships with a default IP address and subnet mask address, which should only be used for an initial system configuration. NOTE: You need to have an IP address available to replace the default IP address if you choose the static mode of IP addressing, or select to use the DHCP mode of IP addressing. 30

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3
Setting Up the DR Series System Hardware
You can interact with the DR Series system hardware using one of two supported methods: a web-based graphical user
interface (GUI) accessed using a web browser or a command line interface (CLI) using a terminal emulator application
(for example, PuTTY). Before you can interact with your system, you must first, however, ensure that the DR Series
system is properly set up.
NOTE:
The topics in this section apply to physical DR Series systems. For information about setting up the virtual
DR Series system, DR2000v, see the
Dell DR2000v Deployment Guide
for your specific VM platform and the
Dell DR
Series System Interoperability Guide
. For more information on the DR Series system CLI commands, see the
Dell
DR Series System Command Line Reference Guide
.
Refer to the following topics for information about setting up the DR Series system hardware.
Interacting with the DR Series System
You interact with the DR Series system by using a web-based graphical user interface (GUI) through a browser-based
connection. The DR Series system GUI provides a single, comprehensive data management interface that lets you
create new data containers, modify or delete existing containers, and perform a number of data-related operations
using its features and settings.
NOTE:
A second method for interacting with the DR Series system is by using its command-line interface (CLI) via
a terminal emulator application (for example, PuTTY).
You can create and manage containers that are the repositories where you store your backup and deduplicated data. A
data container is a shared file system that is imported using a client, and is accessible via file system protocols. For
details, see
Supported File System Protocols
. A data container can also be a virtual tape library (VTL) type container.
The DR Series system provides real-time summary tables, detail tables, and graphs that let you monitor the status of the
data capacity, storage savings, and the throughput of the containers you are managing using its set of GUI features.
Networking Preparations for the DR Series System
Before you can start using the DR Series system, ensure that you have satisfied the following networking prerequisites:
Network:
An active network is available using Ethernet cables and connections.
NOTE:
If your DR Series system is equipped with a 1-GbE NIC, Dell recommends using CAT6 (or CAT6a) copper
cabling. If your DR Series system is equipped with a 10-GbE NIC, Dell recommends using CAT6a copper
cabling.
NOTE:
If your DR Series system is equipped with a 10-GbE enhanced small form-factor pluggable (SFP+) NIC,
you must use Dell-supported SFP+ LC fiber-optic transceivers or twin-axial cabling.
IP Addresses:
You need to make sure to have IP addresses that you use for the DR Series system. The DR Series
system ships with a default IP address and subnet mask address, which should only be used for an initial system
configuration.
NOTE:
You need to have an IP address available to replace the default IP address if you choose the static
mode of IP addressing, or select to use the DHCP mode of IP addressing.
30