Setup and Install

1 Introduction
Traditionally, servers are configured to install the operating system on internal direct-attached
storage devices. With external booting from HBAs or RAID arrays, server-based internal boot
devices can be eliminated. Booting from an external device provides high-availability features for
the operating system during the boot process by configuring the HBA BIOS with redundant boot
paths.
Booting from SAN provides:
Improved disaster recovery
Reduced backup time when the boot path is through a SAN
Additional SAN-managed features
Prerequisites
To use this document, it is essential to be familiar with the infrastructure of SAN and have knowledge
of:
HP Fibre Channel HBAs, CNAs, mezzanine cards, and LOMs
HP Smart Array Controllers
HP disk arrays
HP ProLiant servers and BladeServers
Hardware setup procedures
Fabric administration
Installing an operating system
Virtual connect
iLO
Device Mapper multipath solution (for Linux and Citrix)
Multipath DSM (for Windows)
Server BIOS
The procedure to create and map a LUN on the storage array
The procedure to set up switch zoning
Upgrading server BIOS to the latest released version
Upgrading firmware on all installed cards to the latest version
For up-to-date information on supported versions of firmware, BIOS, and drivers, see the HP HBA
Support Matrix at http://h20272.www2.hp.com/Pages/spock2Html.aspx?htmlFile=hw_hbas.html&
lang=en&cc=US&. It is essential to sign up for HP Passport to enable access.
For more information about HP products, see the HP Manuals website at http://www.hp.com/
support/manuals.
For more information about SAN configurations, see the HP SAN Design Reference Guide at
http://www.hp.com/go/sdgmanuals.
4 Introduction