Change-Id: I6cf1f45f53610026c9e5e095a9cc4bb3599a415b
33 KiB
EMC VNX driver
EMC VNX driver consists of EMCCLIISCSIDriver and EMCCLIFCDriver, and
supports both iSCSI and FC protocol. EMCCLIISCSIDriver
(VNX
iSCSI driver) and EMCCLIFCDriver
(VNX FC driver) are
separately based on the ISCSIDriver
and
FCDriver
defined in the Block Storage service.
The VNX iSCSI driver and VNX FC driver perform the volume operations by executing Navisphere CLI (NaviSecCLI) which is a command-line interface used for management, diagnostics, and reporting functions for VNX.
System requirements
- VNX Operational Environment for Block version 5.32 or higher.
- VNX Snapshot and Thin Provisioning license should be activated for VNX.
- Navisphere CLI v7.32 or higher is installed along with the driver.
Supported operations
- Create, delete, attach, and detach volumes.
- Create, list, and delete volume snapshots.
- Create a volume from a snapshot.
- Copy an image to a volume.
- Clone a volume.
- Extend a volume.
- Migrate a volume.
- Retype a volume.
- Get volume statistics.
- Create and delete consistency groups.
- Create, list, and delete consistency group snapshots.
- Modify consistency groups.
- Efficient non-disruptive volume backup.
Preparation
This section contains instructions to prepare the Block Storage nodes to use the EMC VNX driver. You install the Navisphere CLI, install the driver, ensure you have correct zoning configurations, and register the driver.
Install Navisphere CLI
Navisphere CLI needs to be installed on all Block Storage nodes within an OpenStack deployment. You need to download different versions for different platforms:
For Ubuntu x64, DEB is available at EMC OpenStack Github.
For all other variants of Linux, Navisphere CLI is available at Downloads for VNX2 Series or Downloads for VNX1 Series.
After installation, set the security level of Navisphere CLI to low:
$ /opt/Navisphere/bin/naviseccli security -certificate -setLevel low
Check array software
Make sure your have the following software installed for certain features:
Feature | Software Required |
---|---|
All | ThinProvisioning |
All | VNXSnapshots |
FAST cache support | FASTCache |
Create volume with type compressed |
Compression |
Create volume with type deduplicated |
Deduplication |
Required software
You can check the status of your array software in the Software
page of Storage System Properties
. Here is how it looks
like:
Network configuration
For the FC Driver, FC zoning is properly configured between the hosts
and the VNX. Check register-fc-port-with-vnx
for reference.
For the iSCSI Driver, make sure your VNX iSCSI port is accessible by
your hosts. Check register-iscsi-port-with-vnx
for reference.
You can use initiator_auto_registration = True
configuration to avoid registering the ports manually. Check the detail
of the configuration in emc-vnx-conf
for reference.
If you are trying to setup multipath, refer to multipath-setup
.
Back-end configuration
Make the following changes in the
/etc/cinder/cinder.conf
file.
Minimum configuration
Here is a sample of a minimum back-end configuration. See the
following sections for the detail of each option. Replace
EMCCLIFCDriver
with EMCCLIISCSIDriver
if you
are using the iSCSI driver.
[DEFAULT]
enabled_backends = vnx_array1
[vnx_array1]
san_ip = 10.10.72.41
san_login = sysadmin
san_password = sysadmin
naviseccli_path = /opt/Navisphere/bin/naviseccli
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.emc.emc_cli_fc.EMCCLIFCDriver
initiator_auto_registration = True
Multiple back-end configuration
Here is a sample of a multiple back-end configuration. See the
following sections for the detail of each option. Replace
EMCCLIFCDriver
with EMCCLIISCSIDriver
if you
are using the iSCSI driver.
[DEFAULT]
enabled_backends = backendA, backendB
[backendA]
storage_vnx_pool_names = Pool_01_SAS, Pool_02_FLASH
san_ip = 10.10.72.41
storage_vnx_security_file_dir = /etc/secfile/array1
naviseccli_path = /opt/Navisphere/bin/naviseccli
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.emc.emc_cli_fc.EMCCLIFCDriver
initiator_auto_registration = True
[backendB]
storage_vnx_pool_names = Pool_02_SAS
san_ip = 10.10.26.101
san_login = username
san_password = password
naviseccli_path = /opt/Navisphere/bin/naviseccli
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.emc.emc_cli_fc.EMCCLIFCDriver
initiator_auto_registration = True
For more details on multi-backends, see OpenStack Cloud Administration Guide
Required configurations
IP of the VNX Storage Processors
Specify the SP A and SP B IP to connect:
san_ip = <IP of VNX Storage Processor A>
san_secondary_ip = <IP of VNX Storage Processor B>
VNX login credentials
There are two ways to specify the credentials.
Use plain text username and password.
Supply for plain username and password:
san_login = <VNX account with administrator role> san_password = <password for VNX account> storage_vnx_authentication_type = global
Valid values for
storage_vnx_authentication_type
are:global
(default),local
, andldap
.Use Security file.
This approach avoids the plain text password in your cinder configuration file. Supply a security file as below:
storage_vnx_security_file_dir = <path to security file>
Check Unisphere CLI user guide or authenticate-by-security-file
for how to create a
security file.
Path to your Unisphere CLI
Specify the absolute path to your naviseccli:
naviseccli_path = /opt/Navisphere/bin/naviseccli
Driver name
For the FC Driver, add the following option:
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.emc.emc_cli_fc.EMCCLIFCDriver
For iSCSI Driver, add the following option:
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.emc.emc_cli_iscsi.EMCCLIISCSIDriver
Optional configurations
VNX pool names
Specify the list of pools to be managed, separated by commas. They should already exist in VNX.
storage_vnx_pool_names = pool 1, pool 2
If this value is not specified, all pools of the array will be used.
Initiator auto registration
When initiator_auto_registration
is set to
True
, the driver will automatically register initiators to
all working target ports of the VNX array during volume attaching (The
driver will skip those initiators that have already been registered) if
the option io_port_list
is not specified in the
cinder.conf
file.
If the user wants to register the initiators with some specific ports but not register with the other ports, this functionality should be disabled.
When a comma-separated list is given to io_port_list
,
the driver will only register the initiator to the ports specified in
the list and only return target port(s) which belong to the target ports
in the io_port_list
instead of all target ports.
Example for FC ports:
io_port_list = a-1,B-3
a
orB
is Storage Processor, number1
and3
are Port ID.Example for iSCSI ports:
io_port_list = a-1-0,B-3-0
a
orB
is Storage Processor, the first numbers1
and3
are Port ID and the second number0
is Virtual Port ID
Note
- Rather than de-registered, the registered ports will be simply
bypassed whatever they are in
io_port_list
or not. - The driver will raise an exception if ports in
io_port_list
do not exist in VNX during startup.
Force delete volumes in storage group
Some available
volumes may remain in storage group on
the VNX array due to some OpenStack timeout issue. But the VNX array do
not allow the user to delete the volumes which are in storage group.
Option force_delete_lun_in_storagegroup
is introduced to
allow the user to delete the available
volumes in this
tricky situation.
When force_delete_lun_in_storagegroup
is set to
True
in the back-end section, the driver will move the
volumes out of the storage groups and then delete them if the user tries
to delete the volumes that remain in the storage group on the VNX
array.
The default value of force_delete_lun_in_storagegroup
is
False
.
Over subscription in thin provisioning
Over subscription allows that the sum of all volume's capacity (provisioned capacity) to be larger than the pool's total capacity.
max_over_subscription_ratio
in the back-end section is
the ratio of provisioned capacity over total capacity.
The default value of max_over_subscription_ratio
is
20.0, which means the provisioned capacity can not exceed the total
capacity. If the value of this ratio is set larger than 1.0, the
provisioned capacity can exceed the total capacity.
Storage group automatic deletion
For volume attaching, the driver has a storage group on VNX for each
compute node hosting the vm instances which are going to consume VNX
Block Storage (using compute node's host name as storage group's name).
All the volumes attached to the VM instances in a Compute node will be
put into the storage group. If destroy_empty_storage_group
is set to True
, the driver will remove the empty storage
group after its last volume is detached. For data safety, it does not
suggest to set destroy_empty_storage_group=True
unless the
VNX is exclusively managed by one Block Storage node because consistent
lock_path
is required for operation synchronization for
this behavior.
Initiator auto deregistration
Enabling storage group automatic deletion is the precondition of this
function. If initiator_auto_deregistration
is set to
True
is set, the driver will deregister all the initiators
of the host after its storage group is deleted.
FC SAN auto zoning
The EMC VNX FC driver supports FC SAN auto zoning when
ZoneManager
is configured. Set zoning_mode
to
fabric
in the [DEFAULT]
section to enable this
feature. For ZoneManager configuration, refer to Block Storage official
guide.
Volume number threshold
In VNX, there is a limitation on the number of pool volumes that can be created in the system. When the limitation is reached, no more pool volumes can be created even if there is remaining capacity in the storage pool. In other words, if the scheduler dispatches a volume creation request to a back end that has free capacity but reaches the volume limitation, the creation fails.
The default value of check_max_pool_luns_threshold
is
False
. When
check_max_pool_luns_threshold=True
, the pool-based back end
will check the limit and will report 0 free capacity to the scheduler if
the limit is reached. So the scheduler will be able to skip this kind of
pool-based back end that runs out of the pool volume number.
iSCSI initiators
iscsi_initiators
is a dictionary of IP addresses of the
iSCSI initiator ports on OpenStack Compute and Block Storage nodes which
want to connect to VNX via iSCSI. If this option is configured, the
driver will leverage this information to find an accessible iSCSI target
portal for the initiator when attaching volume. Otherwise, the iSCSI
target portal will be chosen in a relative random way.
Note
This option is only valid for iSCSI driver.
Here is an example. VNX will connect host1
with
10.0.0.1
and 10.0.0.2
. And it will connect
host2
with 10.0.0.3
.
The key name (host1
in the example) should be the output
of hostname
command.
iscsi_initiators = {"host1":["10.0.0.1", "10.0.0.2"],"host2":["10.0.0.3"]}
Default timeout
Specify the timeout in minutes for operations like LUN migration, LUN creation, etc. For example, LUN migration is a typical long running operation, which depends on the LUN size and the load of the array. An upper bound in the specific deployment can be set to avoid unnecessary long wait.
The default value for this option is infinite
.
default_timeout = 10
Max LUNs per storage group
The max_luns_per_storage_group
specify the maximum
number of LUNs in a storage group. Default value is 255. It is also the
maximum value supported by VNX.
Ignore pool full threshold
If ignore_pool_full_threshold
is set to
True
, driver will force LUN creation even if the full
threshold of pool is reached. Default to False
.
Extra spec options
Extra specs are used in volume types created in Block Storage as the preferred property of the volume.
The Block Storage scheduler will use extra specs to find the suitable back end for the volume and the Block Storage driver will create the volume based on the properties specified by the extra spec.
Use the following command to create a volume type:
$ cinder type-create "demoVolumeType"
Use the following command to update the extra spec of a volume type:
$ cinder type-key "demoVolumeType" set provisioning:type=thin
The following sections describe the VNX extra keys.
Provisioning type
- Key:
provisioning:type
- Possible Values:
thick
Volume is fully provisioned.
Run the following commands to create a
thick
volume type:$ cinder type-create "ThickVolumeType" $ cinder type-key "ThickVolumeType" set provisioning:type=thick thick_provisioning_support='<is> True'
thin
Volume is virtually provisioned.
Run the following commands to create a
thin
volume type:$ cinder type-create "ThinVolumeType" $ cinder type-key "ThinVolumeType" set provisioning:type=thin thin_provisioning_support='<is> True'
deduplicated
Volume is
thin
and deduplication is enabled. The administrator shall go to VNX to configure the system level deduplication settings. To create a deduplicated volume, the VNX Deduplication license must be activated on VNX, and specifydeduplication_support=True
to let Block Storage scheduler find the proper volume back end.Run the following commands to create a
deduplicated
volume type:$ cinder type-create "DeduplicatedVolumeType" $ cinder type-key "DeduplicatedVolumeType" set provisioning:type=deduplicated deduplication_support='<is> True'
compressed
Volume is
thin
and compression is enabled. The administrator shall go to the VNX to configure the system level compression settings. To create a compressed volume, the VNX Compression license must be activated on VNX, and usecompression_support=True
to let Block Storage scheduler find a volume back end. VNX does not support creating snapshots on a compressed volume.Run the following commands to create a
compressed
volume type:$ cinder type-create "CompressedVolumeType" $ cinder type-key "CompressedVolumeType" set provisioning:type=compressed compression_support='<is> True'
- Default:
thick
Note
provisioning:type
replaces the old spec key
storagetype:provisioning
. The latter one will be obsoleted
in the next release. If both provisioning:type
and
storagetype:provisioning
are set in the volume type, the
value of provisioning:type
will be used.
Storage tiering support
- Key:
storagetype:tiering
- Possible values:
StartHighThenAuto
Auto
HighestAvailable
LowestAvailable
NoMovement
- Default:
StartHighThenAuto
VNX supports fully automated storage tiering which requires the FAST
license activated on the VNX. The OpenStack administrator can use the
extra spec key storagetype:tiering
to set the tiering
policy of a volume and use the key
fast_support='<is> True'
to let Block Storage
scheduler find a volume back end which manages a VNX with FAST license
activated. Here are the five supported values for the extra spec key
storagetype:tiering
:
Run the following commands to create a volume type with tiering policy:
$ cinder type-create "ThinVolumeOnLowestAvaibleTier"
$ cinder type-key "CompressedVolumeOnLowestAvaibleTier" set provisioning:type=thin storagetype:tiering=Auto fast_support='<is> True'
Note
The tiering policy cannot be applied to a deduplicated volume. Tiering policy of the deduplicated LUN align with the settings of the pool.
FAST cache support
- Key:
fast_cache_enabled
- Possible values:
True
False
- Default:
False
VNX has FAST Cache feature which requires the FAST Cache license
activated on the VNX. Volume will be created on the backend with FAST
cache enabled when True
is specified.
Snap-copy
- Key:
copytype:snap
- Possible values:
True
False
- Default:
False
The VNX driver supports snap-copy, which extremely accelerates the process for creating a copied volume.
By default, the driver will do a full data copy while creating a volume from a snapshot or cloning a volume, which is time-consuming especially for large volumes. When the snap-copy is used, the driver will simply create a snapshot and mount it as a volume for the two types of operations which will be instant even for large volumes.
To enable this functionality, the source volume should have
copytype:snap=True
in the extra specs of its volume type.
Then the new volume cloned from the source or copied from the snapshot
for the source, will be in fact a snap-copy instead of a full copy. If a
full copy is needed, retype/migration can be used to convert the
snap-copy volume to a full-copy volume which may be time-consuming.
$ cinder type-create "SnapCopy"
$ cinder type-key "SnapCopy" set copytype:snap=True
User can determine whether the volume is a snap-copy volume or not by
showing its metadata. If the lun_type
in metadata is
smp
, the volume is a snap-copy volume. Otherwise, it is a
full-copy volume.
$ cinder metadata-show <volume>
Constraints
copytype:snap=True
is not allowed in the volume type of a consistency group.- Clone and snapshot creation are not allowed on a copied volume created through the snap-copy before it is converted to a full copy.
- The number of snap-copy volume created from a source volume is limited to 255 at one point in time.
- The source volume which has snap-copy volume can not be deleted.
Pool name
- Key:
pool_name
- Possible values: name of the storage pool managed by cinder
- Default: None
If the user wants to create a volume on a certain storage pool in a back end that manages multiple pools, a volume type with a extra spec specified storage pool should be created first, then the user can use this volume type to create the volume.
Run the following commands to create the volume type:
$ cinder type-create "HighPerf"
$ cinder type-key "HighPerf" set pool_name=Pool_02_SASFLASH volume_backend_name=vnx_41
Advanced features
Read-only volumes
OpenStack supports read-only volumes. The following command can be used to set a volume as read-only.
$ cinder readonly-mode-update <volume> True
After a volume is marked as read-only, the driver will forward the information when a hypervisor is attaching the volume and the hypervisor will make sure the volume is read-only.
Efficient non-disruptive volume backup
The default implementation in Block Storage for non-disruptive volume backup is not efficient since a cloned volume will be created during backup.
The approach of efficient backup is to create a snapshot for the volume and connect this snapshot (a mount point in VNX) to the Block Storage host for volume backup. This eliminates migration time involved in volume clone.
Constraints
- Backup creation for a snap-copy volume is not allowed if the volume
status is
in-use
since snapshot cannot be taken from this volume.
Best practice
Multipath setup
Enabling multipath volume access is recommended for robust data access. The major configuration includes:
- Install
multipath-tools
,sysfsutils
andsg3-utils
on the nodes hosting Nova-Compute and Cinder-Volume services. Check the operating system manual for the system distribution for specific installation steps. For Red Hat based distributions, they should bedevice-mapper-multipath
,sysfsutils
andsg3_utils
. - Specify
use_multipath_for_image_xfer=true
in thecinder.conf
file for each FC/iSCSI back end. - Specify
iscsi_use_multipath=True
inlibvirt
section of thenova.conf
file. This option is valid for both iSCSI and FC driver.
For multipath-tools, here is an EMC recommended sample of
/etc/multipath.conf
file.
user_friendly_names
is not specified in the
configuration and thus it will take the default value no
.
It is not recommended to set it to yes
because it may fail
operations such as VM live migration.
blacklist {
# Skip the files under /dev that are definitely not FC/iSCSI devices
# Different system may need different customization
devnode "^(ram|raw|loop|fd|md|dm-|sr|scd|st)[0-9]*"
devnode "^hd[a-z][0-9]*"
devnode "^cciss!c[0-9]d[0-9]*[p[0-9]*]"
# Skip LUNZ device from VNX
device {
vendor "DGC"
product "LUNZ"
}
}
defaults {
user_friendly_names no
flush_on_last_del yes
}
devices {
# Device attributed for EMC CLARiiON and VNX series ALUA
device {
vendor "DGC"
product ".*"
product_blacklist "LUNZ"
path_grouping_policy group_by_prio
path_selector "round-robin 0"
path_checker emc_clariion
features "1 queue_if_no_path"
hardware_handler "1 alua"
prio alua
failback immediate
}
}
Note
When multipath is used in OpenStack, multipath faulty devices may come out in Nova-Compute nodes due to different issues (Bug 1336683 is a typical example).
A solution to completely avoid faulty devices has not been found yet.
faulty_device_cleanup.py
mitigates this issue when VNX
iSCSI storage is used. Cloud administrators can deploy the script in all
Nova-Compute nodes and use a CRON job to run the script on each
Nova-Compute node periodically so that faulty devices will not stay too
long. Refer to: VNX
faulty device cleanup for detailed usage and the script.
Restrictions and limitations
iSCSI port cache
EMC VNX iSCSI driver caches the iSCSI ports information, so that the
user should restart the cinder-volume
service or wait for
seconds (which is configured by periodic_interval
in the
cinder.conf
file) before any volume attachment operation
after changing the iSCSI port configurations. Otherwise the attachment
may fail because the old iSCSI port configurations were used.
No extending for volume with snapshots
VNX does not support extending the thick volume which has a snapshot.
If the user tries to extend a volume which has a snapshot, the status of
the volume would change to error_extending
.
Limitations for deploying cinder on computer node
It is not recommended to deploy the driver on a compute node if
cinder upload-to-image --force True
is used against an
in-use volume. Otherwise,
cinder upload-to-image --force True
will terminate the data
access of the vm instance to the volume.
Storage group with host names in VNX
When the driver notices that there is no existing storage group that has the host name as the storage group name, it will create the storage group and also add the compute node's or Block Storage node's registered initiators into the storage group.
If the driver notices that the storage group already exists, it will assume that the registered initiators have also been put into it and skip the operations above for better performance.
It is recommended that the storage administrator does not create the storage group manually and instead relies on the driver for the preparation. If the storage administrator needs to create the storage group manually for some special requirements, the correct registered initiators should be put into the storage group as well (otherwise the following volume attaching operations will fail).
EMC storage-assisted volume migration
EMC VNX driver supports storage-assisted volume migration, when the
user starts migrating with
cinder migrate --force-host-copy False <volume_id> <host>
or cinder migrate <volume_id> <host>
, cinder
will try to leverage the VNX's native volume migration
functionality.
In following scenarios, VNX storage-assisted volume migration will not be triggered:
- Volume migration between back ends with different storage protocol, for example, FC and iSCSI.
- Volume is to be migrated across arrays.
Appendix
Authenticate by security file
VNX credentials are necessary when the driver connects to the VNX
system. Credentials in global
, local
and
ldap
scopes are supported. There are two approaches to
provide the credentials.
The recommended one is using the Navisphere CLI security file to provide the credentials which can get rid of providing the plain text credentials in the configuration file. Following is the instruction on how to do this.
Find out the Linux user id of the
cinder-volume
processes. Assuming thecinder-volume
service is running by the accountcinder
.Run
su
as root user.In
/etc/passwd
file, changecinder:x:113:120::/var/lib/cinder:/bin/false
tocinder:x:113:120::/var/lib/cinder:/bin/bash
(This temporary change is to make step 4 work.)Save the credentials on behalf of
cinder
user to a security file (assuming the array credentials areadmin/admin
inglobal
scope). In the command below, the-secfilepath
switch is used to specify the location to save the security file.# su -l cinder -c '/opt/Navisphere/bin/naviseccli \ -AddUserSecurity -user admin -password admin -scope 0 -secfilepath <location>'
Change
cinder:x:113:120::/var/lib/cinder:/bin/bash
back tocinder:x:113:120::/var/lib/cinder:/bin/false
in/etc/passwd
file.Remove the credentials options
san_login
,san_password
andstorage_vnx_authentication_type
fromcinder.conf
file. (normally it is/etc/cinder/cinder.conf
file). Add optionstorage_vnx_security_file_dir
and set its value to the directory path of your security file generated in the above step. Omit this option if-secfilepath
is not used in the above step.Restart the
cinder-volume
service to validate the change.
Register FC port with VNX
This configuration is only required when
initiator_auto_registration=False
.
To access VNX storage, the Compute nodes should be registered on VNX first if initiator auto registration is not enabled.
To perform Copy Image to Volume
and
Copy Volume to Image
operations, the nodes running the
cinder-volume
service (Block Storage nodes) must be
registered with the VNX as well.
The steps mentioned below are for the compute nodes. Follow the same steps for the Block Storage nodes also (The steps can be skipped if initiator auto registration is enabled).
- Assume
20:00:00:24:FF:48:BA:C2:21:00:00:24:FF:48:BA:C2
is the WWN of a FC initiator port name of the compute node whose host name and IP aremyhost1
and10.10.61.1
. Register20:00:00:24:FF:48:BA:C2:21:00:00:24:FF:48:BA:C2
in Unisphere: - Log in to
Unisphere
, go toFNM0000000000 > Hosts > Initiators
. - Refresh and wait until the initiator
20:00:00:24:FF:48:BA:C2:21:00:00:24:FF:48:BA:C2
with SP PortA-1
appears. - Click the
Register
button, selectCLARiiON/VNX
and enter the host name (which is the output of thehostname
command) and IP address:- Hostname:
myhost1
- IP:
10.10.61.1
- Click
Register
.
- Hostname:
- Then host
10.10.61.1
will appear underHosts > Host List
as well. - Register the
wwn
with more ports if needed.
Register iSCSI port with VNX
This configuration is only required when
initiator_auto_registration=False
.
To access VNX storage, the compute nodes should be registered on VNX first if initiator auto registration is not enabled.
To perform Copy Image to Volume
and
Copy Volume to Image
operations, the nodes running the
cinder-volume
service (Block Storage nodes) must be
registered with the VNX as well.
The steps mentioned below are for the compute nodes. Follow the same steps for the Block Storage nodes also (The steps can be skipped if initiator auto registration is enabled).
On the compute node with IP address
10.10.61.1
and host namemyhost1
, execute the following commands (assuming10.10.61.35
is the iSCSI target):Start the iSCSI initiator service on the node:
# /etc/init.d/open-iscsi start
Discover the iSCSI target portals on VNX:
# iscsiadm -m discovery -t st -p 10.10.61.35
Change directory to
/etc/iscsi
:# cd /etc/iscsi
Find out the
iqn
of the node:# more initiatorname.iscsi
Log in to
VNX
from the compute node using the target corresponding to the SPA port:# iscsiadm -m node -T iqn.1992-04.com.emc:cx.apm01234567890.a0 -p 10.10.61.35 -l
Assume
iqn.1993-08.org.debian:01:1a2b3c4d5f6g
is the initiator name of the compute node. Registeriqn.1993-08.org.debian:01:1a2b3c4d5f6g
in Unisphere:- Log in to
Unisphere
, go toFNM0000000000 > Hosts > Initiators
.
#. Refresh and wait until the initiator
iqn.1993-08.org.debian:01:1a2b3c4d5f6g
with SP PortA-8v0
appears.- Click the
Register
button, selectCLARiiON/VNX
and enter the host name (which is the output of thehostname
command) and IP address:- Hostname:
myhost1
- IP:
10.10.61.1
- Click
Register
.
- Hostname:
- Then host
10.10.61.1
will appear underHosts > Host List
as well.
- Log in to
Log out
iSCSI
on the node:# iscsiadm -m node -u
Log in to
VNX
from the compute node using the target corresponding to the SPB port:# iscsiadm -m node -T iqn.1992-04.com.emc:cx.apm01234567890.b8 -p 10.10.61.36 -l
In
Unisphere
, register the initiator with the SPB port.Log out
iSCSI
on the node:# iscsiadm -m node -u
Register the
iqn
with more ports if needed.