HP StorageWorks 6000 HP StorageWorks VLS and D2D Solutions Guide (AG306-96028, - Page 47

Operating System Tape Configuration, Windows Large LUN support.

Page 47 highlights

• Small fabric (16 ports or less) may not need zoning. If no zoning is used, make sure that the virtual tape external Fibre Channel connections resides in the lowest ports of the switch. • Small to medium fabric (16 - 128 ports) can use host-centric zoning. Host-centric zoning is implemented by creating a specific zone for each server or host, and adding only those storage elements to be utilized by that host. Host-centric zoning prevents a server from detecting any other devices on the SAN or including other servers, and it simplifies the device discovery process. • Disk and tape on the same pair of HBAs is supported along with the coexistence of array multipath software (no multipath to tape, but coexistence of the multipath software and tape devices). • Large fabric (128 ports or more) can use host-centric zoning and split disk and tape targets. Splitting disk and tape targets from being in the same zone together will help to keep the tape controllers free from discovering disk controllers which it does not need to see. For optimal performance, where practical, dedicate HBAs for disk and tape. NOTE: Overlapping zones are supported. Operating System Tape Configuration Enterprise backup applications generally support media agents (which communicate with tape and virtual tape devices) on various operating systems to provide a heterogeneous enterprise backup environment. The VLS and D2D products support many of these operating system variations. (The EBS Compatibility Matrix available at http://www.hp.com/go/ebs details which operating systems with each backup application are supported by VLS and D2D). The Enterprise Backup Solutions Design Guide available at the same web location has detailed instructions and best practices for configuring the tape drivers for the following operating systems: • HP-UX • Microsoft® Windows • Tru64 UNIX® • Linux • NetWare • Sun Solaris • IBM AIX When adding a VLS or D2D virtual library to a server running a media agent, you must: • Ensure that the minimum operating system patches are installed. • Configure the Fibre Channel HBAs in the operating system which generally means configuring persistent binding so that the virtual library device LUNs are always presenting on the same SCSI path regardless of SAN configuration changes. • Detect the virtual tape drives and create the tape drive device paths (generally the virtual tape robot is discovered and configured by the backup application itself rather than the operating system). Some operating systems limit the number of tape LUNs that can be discovered to eight LUNs on each device port (remember there are multiple Fibre Channel ports on the backup devices), but there are workarounds in some cases: • Windows Large LUN support. Enable when using more than 8 LUNs per port. Information is available at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310072/. • HPUX Large LUN support (on v11.31 or higher). HP StorageWorks VLS and D2D Solutions Guide 47

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Small fabric (16 ports or less) may not need zoning. If no zoning is used, make sure that the virtual
tape external Fibre Channel connections resides in the lowest ports of the switch.
Small to medium fabric (16 - 128 ports) can use host-centric zoning. Host-centric zoning is imple-
mented by creating a specific zone for each server or host, and adding only those storage elements
to be utilized by that host. Host-centric zoning prevents a server from detecting any other devices
on the SAN or including other servers, and it simplifies the device discovery process.
Disk and tape on the same pair of HBAs is supported along with the coexistence of array multipath
software (no multipath to tape, but coexistence of the multipath software and tape devices).
Large fabric (128 ports or more) can use host-centric zoning and split disk and tape targets.
Splitting disk and tape targets from being in the same zone together will help to keep the tape
controllers free from discovering disk controllers which it does not need to see. For optimal per-
formance, where practical, dedicate HBAs for disk and tape.
NOTE:
Overlapping zones are supported.
Operating System Tape Configuration
Enterprise backup applications generally support media agents (which communicate with tape and
virtual tape devices) on various operating systems to provide a heterogeneous enterprise backup
environment. The VLS and D2D products support many of these operating system variations. (The
EBS
Compatibility Matrix
available at
h
t
tp://w
w
w
.hp
.co
m/go/eb
s
details which operating systems with
each backup application are supported by VLS and D2D). The
Enterprise Backup Solutions Design
Guide
available at the same web location has detailed instructions and best practices for configuring
the tape drivers for the following operating systems:
HP-UX
Microsoft® Windows
Tru64 UNIX®
Linux
NetWare
Sun Solaris
IBM AIX
When adding a VLS or D2D virtual library to a server running a media agent, you must:
Ensure that the minimum operating system patches are installed.
Configure the Fibre Channel HBAs in the operating system which generally means configuring
persistent binding so that the virtual library device LUNs are always presenting on the same SCSI
path regardless of SAN configuration changes.
Detect the virtual tape drives and create the tape drive device paths (generally the virtual tape
robot is discovered and configured by the backup application itself rather than the operating
system). Some operating systems limit the number of tape LUNs that can be discovered to eight
LUNs on each device port (remember there are multiple Fibre Channel ports on the backup devices),
but there are workarounds in some cases:
Windows Large LUN support.
Enable when using more than 8 LUNs per port. Information is available at
h
t
tp://su
ppo
r
t
.mi-
c
r
o
s
o
f
t
.co
m/kb/3100
7
2/
.
HPUX Large LUN support (on v11.31 or higher).
HP StorageWorks VLS and D2D Solutions Guide
47