.Part 4 SAN Extension and Bridging HP SAN Design Reference Guide 785354-001

Service Location Protocol
Clients (initiators) discover services (targets) using SLP, a client-server protocol. SLP for iSCSI uses
three components:
An iSCSI initiator has an SLP UA that serves as a client.
iSCSI targets have an SLP SA that acts as an SLP server.
A DA interprets multicast service requests from the server.
Initiators use three techniques for discovering targets:
Unicast discovery service requests to the DA
Multicast discovery service requests to SAs
Unicast discovery service requests directly to an SA
Static configuration
With static configuration, an administrator manually sets the target addresses for the initiators. The
statically configured addresses for the targets persist across initiator reboots. HP recommends static
configuration for the smallest iSCSI SANs.
SendTargets command
With the SendTargets command, administrators configure the address of each target portal,
setting up a range of target addresses for discovery. In a discovery session, an initiator sends the
SendTarget command to discover all of the accessible target node names. HP recommends
SendTargets for small iSCSI SANs.
Internet Storage Name Service
The iSNS is a client-server discovery protocol. It provides naming and resource discovery services
for storage systems on the IP network. The iSNS is modeled on both IP and Fibre Channel. iSNS
components include:
iSNS server—A directory server with optional security features.
iSCSI initiators with iSNS client capabilities—The initiator iSNS client registers the initiator with
the iSNS server and queries for a list of targets.
iSCSI targets with iSNS client capabilities—The target iSNS client registers the target with the
iSNS server.
Sessions and logins
A session is a data exchange between an initiator and target. At the beginning of a session,
information about the session is exchanged; later, application data is exchanged.
A session is enabled through an iSCSI login process:
1. The initiator establishes a TCP/IP connection.
2. The initiator starts the iSCSI login phase.
3. The initiator and target negotiate variable parameters.
4. Optional—The target verifies allowable connectivity with a security phase.
5. At the completion of the iSCSI login phase:
Success means the target sends a login accept to the initiator; the session continues.
Failure means the login is rejected; the TCP/IP connection is closed.
320 iSCSI storage