HP Integrity BL870c HP Integrity iLO 2 Operations Guide, Eleventh Edition - Page 82

Partition User Support Options, Table 7-3 Commands and Associated Access Right, Single Partition Use

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Table 7-3 Commands and Associated Access Right (continued) Command CO HE SL Location Access Right Console Access Login Access 1. View SEL, FPL, LIVE - Login rights for all partitions to which the user has access 2. View iLO 2 event log - Login rights for all partitions to which the user has access 3. View MPEL Logs - MP Configuration rights for all partitions to which the user has access 4. Clear SEL & FPL Logs - MP Configuration rights for all partitions to which the user has access VFP X MPEL IO (sx2000 only) VM (sx2000 only) Login Access Login Access MP Configuration Access Command Menu Login Access Command Menu All for all supported partitions These access rights work in conjunction with the three different kinds of partition user support options. Partition User Support Options In a server that supports multiple partitions, the following options are available for partition users. A user can be configured for any of the following partition usage levels: Single Partition Use A user could have access to any one partition with rights defined. Multipartition User, Same Rights A user can have access to multiple partitions of a server but with the same rights for all the partitions. Multipartition User, Different Rights A user can have access to multiple partitions with different rights for all the partitions. If a server has multiple partitions, the following rules apply for a user: • Each user, at the time of creation, is classified either as an all or #partition user. A partition might or might not be configured in the system. • Login rights are required for a user to login. These rights are checked before running each command to ensure that LOGIN rights are not revoked in the interim. A user with L rights can run all commands related to status and read-only commands. • When a user tries to run partition-specific commands but the partition is not configured, a message appears that the partition is not configured • Special commands such as pe, ru, and re require a user to have all rights to all partitions. These commands can affect cells that are considered 'free cells' (not associated with any partitions). Therefore, this mandate applies to users before running special commands. • For all MP-wide commands (such as ldap, lc, and so on), a user must have corresponding rights for all partitions that the user has access to. • When assigning rights to user logins in a multiserver environment, remember the various combinations of available rights, types of commands, and partition authority. 82 Configuring DHCP, DNS, LDAP, and Schema-Free LDAP

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Table 7-3 Commands and Associated Access Right
(continued)
Access Right
Location
Command
Console Access
CO
Login Access
HE
1.
View SEL, FPL, LIVE - Login rights for all partitions to which the user
has access
2.
View iLO 2 event log - Login rights for all partitions to which the user
has access
3.
View MPEL Logs - MP Configuration rights for all partitions to which
the user has access
4.
Clear SEL & FPL Logs - MP Configuration rights for all partitions to
which the user has access
SL
Login Access
VFP
Login Access
X
MP Configuration Access
MPEL
Login Access
Command Menu
IO (sx2000 only)
All for all supported partitions
Command Menu
VM (sx2000 only)
These access rights work in conjunction with the three different kinds of partition user support
options.
Partition User Support Options
In a server that supports multiple partitions, the following options are available for partition
users. A user can be configured for any of the following partition usage levels:
Single Partition Use
A user could have access to any one partition with rights defined.
Multipartition User, Same Rights
A user can have access to multiple partitions of a server but
with the same rights for all the partitions.
Multipartition User, Different Rights
A user can have access to multiple partitions with different
rights for all the partitions.
If a server has multiple partitions, the following rules apply for a user:
Each user, at the time of creation, is classified either as an
all
or
#partition
user. A
partition might or might not be configured in the system.
Login rights are required for a user to login. These rights are checked before running each
command to ensure that LOGIN rights are not revoked in the interim. A user with
L
rights
can run all commands related to status and read-only commands.
When a user tries to run partition-specific commands but the partition is not configured, a
message appears that the partition is not configured
Special commands such as
pe
,
ru
, and
re
require a user to have all rights to all partitions.
These commands can affect cells that are considered ‘free cells’ (not associated with any
partitions). Therefore, this mandate applies to users before running special commands.
For all MP-wide commands (such as
ldap
,
lc
, and so on), a user must have corresponding
rights for all partitions that the user has access to.
When assigning rights to user logins in a multiserver environment, remember the various
combinations of available rights, types of commands, and partition authority.
82
Configuring DHCP, DNS, LDAP, and Schema-Free LDAP