HP StorageWorks 4/32 HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 5.2.x administrator guide (5697 - Page 401
Evaluating the fabric, Fabric OS versions
View all HP StorageWorks 4/32 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 401 highlights
Evaluating the fabric In addition to this section, refer to the HP StorageWorks SAN Design reference guide for information on evaluating the fabric: http://h18000.www1.hp.com/products/storageworks/san/documentation.html If there is the possibility that your fabric contains host devices with static PID bindings, you should evaluate the fabric to: • Find any devices that bind to PIDs • Determine how each device driver will respond to the PID format change • Determine how any multipathing software will respond to a fabric service interruption If current details about the SAN are already available, it might be possible to skip the Data Collection step. If not, it is necessary to collect information about each device in the SAN. Any type of device might be able to bind by PID; each device should be evaluated before attempting an online update. This information has broad applicability, because PID-bound devices are not able to seamlessly perform in many routine maintenance or failure scenarios. 1. Collect device, software, hardware, and configuration data. The following is a non-comprehensive list of information to collect: • HBA driver versions • Fabric OS versions • RAID array microcode versions • SCSI bridge code versions • JBOD drive firmware versions • Multipathing software versions • HBA time-out values • Multipathing software timeout values • Kernel timeout values • Configuration of switch 2. Make a list of manually configurable PID drivers. Some device drivers do not automatically bind by PID, but allow the operator to manually create a PID binding. For example, persistent binding of PIDs to logical drives might be done in many HBA drivers. Make a list of all devices that are configured this way. If manual PID binding is in use, consider changing to WWN binding. The following are some of the device types that might be manually configured to bind by PID: • HBA drivers (persistent binding) • RAID arrays (LUN access control) • SCSI bridges (LUN mapping) 3. Analyze data. After you have determined the code versions of each device on the fabric, they must be evaluated to find out if any automatically bind by PID. It might be easiest to work with the support providers of these devices to get this information. If this is not possible, you might need to perform empirical testing. Binding by PID can create management difficulties in a number of scenarios. It is recommended that you not use drivers that bind by PID. If the current drivers do bind by PID, upgrade to WWN-binding drivers if possible. The drivers shipping by default with HP/UX and AIX at the time of this writing still bind by PID, and so detailed procedures are provided for these operating systems in this chapter. Similar procedures can be developed for other operating systems that run HBA drivers that bind by PID. There is no inherent PID binding problem with either AIX or HP/UX. It is the HBA drivers shipping with these operating systems that bind by PID. Both operating systems are expected to release HBA drivers that bind by WWN, and these drivers might already be available through some support channels. Work with the appropriate support provider to find out about driver availability. Fabric OS 5.2.x administrator guide 385