D Simplify SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide 59055-00 B Page i
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide Information furnished in this manual is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, QLogic Corporation assumes no responsibility for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. QLogic Corporation reserves the right to change product specifications at any time without notice. Applications described in this document for any of these products are for illustrative purposes only.
Table of Contents Section 1 Introduction 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.6.1 1.6.2 Intended Audience ............................................................................................. 1-1 Related Materials ............................................................................................... 1-2 Safety Notices .................................................................................................... 1-3 Sicherheitshinweise...........................................................
SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide D 2.1.2.3 2.2 2.2.1 2.2.1.1 2.2.1.2 2.2.2 2.2.3 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 System Fault LED (Amber)............................................................... 2-5 Fibre Channel Ports ........................................................................................... 2-5 Port LEDs .................................................................................................. 2-6 Port Logged-In LED (Green) .............................................
D 4.2 4.2.1 4.2.2 4.2.3 4.2.4 4.2.4.1 4.2.4.2 4.2.5 4.2.5.1 4.2.5.2 4.2.5.3 4.2.5.4 4.2.6 SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide 4.2.6.1 4.2.6.2 4.2.6.3 4.2.6.4 4.2.7 4.2.8 4.3 4.3.1 4.3.2 4.3.3 4.4 4.5 Installing a Switch............................................................................................... 4-2 Mount the Switch ....................................................................................... 4-3 Install Transceivers.............................................
SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide 5.3 5.3.1 5.3.2 5.3.3 5.3.4 5.3.5 5.3.6 5.3.7 5.3.8 5.3.9 5.3.10 5.3.11 D Recovering a Switch......................................................................................... 5-11 Maintenance – Exit .................................................................................. 5-12 Maintenance – Image Unpack................................................................. 5-12 Maintenance – Reset Network Config ..............................
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide Lip Command ..........................................................................................B-21 Passwd Command ..................................................................................B-22 Ping Command........................................................................................B-23 Ps Command...........................................................................................B-24 Quit Command .......................
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide 3-5 3-6 4-1 4-2 4-3 4-4 4-5 4-6 5-1 5-2 5-3 Mesh Topology............................................................................................................. 3-12 Multistage Topology ..................................................................................................... 3-13 SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch..............................................................................
Section 1 Introduction This manual describes the features and installation of the SANbox® 3000 Fibre Channel switch, firmware version 4.0. This manual is organized as follows: Section 1 describes the intended audience, related materials, safety notices, communications statements, laser safety information, electrostatic discharge sensitivity precautions, accessible parts, general program license, and technical support. Section 2 is an overview of the switch.
D 1 – Introduction Related Materials 1.2 Related Materials The following manuals and materials are referenced in the text and/or provide additional information. SANbox 5200 Switch Management User’s Guide, publication number 59056-00. SANbox Manager Application Programming Interface Reference Guide, publication number 59037-06. QLogic Switch Interoperability Guide v3.0. This PDF document can be downloaded at http://www.qlogic.com/interopguide/info.asp#inter.
D 1 – Introduction Safety Notices 1.3 Safety Notices A Warning notice indicates the presence of a hazard that has the potential of causing personal injury. 4-3, 4-7 A Caution notice indicates the presence of a hazard that has the potential of causing damage to the equipment. 4-4, 5-14 1.4 Sicherheitshinweise Ein Warnhinweis weist auf das Vorhandensein einer Gefahr hin, die möglicherweise Verletzungen zur Folge hat.
1 – Introduction Communications Statements D 1.6 Communications Statements The following statements apply to this product. The statements for other products intended for use with this product appear in their accompanying manuals. 1.6.1 Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Class A Statement This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules.
D 1 – Introduction Communications Statements 1.6.3 Avis de conformité aux normes du ministère des Communications du Canada Cet équipement ne dépasse pas les limites de Classe A d'émission de bruits radioélectriques por les appareils numériques, telles que prescrites par le Réglement sur le brouillage radioélectrique établi par le ministère des Communications du Canada.
1 – Introduction Laser Safety Information D 1.6.5 VCCI Class A Statement This is a Class A product based on the standard of the Voluntary Control Council For Interference by Information Technology Equipment (VCCI). If this equipment is used in a domestic environment, radio disturbance may arise. When such trouble occurs, the user may be required to take corrective actions. 1.
D 1 – Introduction Accessible Parts 1.9 Accessible Parts The Field Replaceable Units (FRUs) for the SANbox 5200 switch are the following: Small Form-Factor Pluggable (SFP) optical transceivers XPAK optical transceivers 1.10 Pièces Accessibles Les pièces remplaçables, Field Replaceable Units (FRU), du commutateur SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch sont les suivantes: Interfaces aux media d’interconnexion appelés SFP transceivers.
1 – Introduction General Public License D 1.12 General Public License QLogic® Fibre Channel switches are powered by the Linux operating system. A machine-readable copy of the Linux source code is available upon written request to the following address. A nominal fee will be charged for reproduction, shipping, and handling costs in accordance with the General Public License.
D 1 – Introduction General Public License We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software. Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software.
1 – Introduction General Public License D modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions: a. You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and the date of any change. b.
D 1 – Introduction General Public License b. Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or, c.
1 – Introduction General Public License D rights granted herein. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to this License. 8. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License.
D 1 – Introduction General Public License License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. 12. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this.
D 1 – Introduction General Public License one line to give the program's name and an idea of what it does. Copyright (C) yyyy name of author This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
D 1 – Introduction Technical Support 1.13 Technical Support Customers should contact their authorized maintenance provider for technical support of their QLogic switch products. QLogic-direct customers may contact QLogic Technical Support; others will be redirected to their authorized maintenance provider. Visit the QLogic support Web site listed in Contact Information for the latest firmware and software updates. 1.13.
1 – Introduction Technical Support D Notes 1-16 59055-00 B
Section 2 General Description This section describes the features and capabilities of the SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel switch. The following topics are described: Chassis controls and LEDs Fibre channel ports Ethernet port Serial port Power supply and fan Switch management Fabrics are managed with the SANbox Manager switch management application (version 4.00) and the Command Line Interface (CLI).
D 2 – General Description Chassis Controls and LEDs 2.1 Chassis Controls and LEDs The Maintenance button shown in Figure 2-2 is the only chassis control and is used to reset a switch or to recover a disabled switch. The chassis LEDs provide information about the switch’s operational status. These LEDS include the Input Power LED, Heartbeat LED, and the System Fault LED. To apply power to the switch, plug the power cord into the switch AC power receptacle and into a 110 or 230 VAC power source.
D 2 – General Description Chassis Controls and LEDs 2.1.1.1 Resetting a Switch To reset the switch, use a pointed tool to momentarily press and release (less than 2 seconds) the Maintenance button. The switch will respond as follows: 1. All of the chassis LEDs will illuminate, then the System Fault LED extinguishes leaving only the Input Power LED and Heartbeat LED illuminated. 2. After approximately 1 minute, the power-on self test (POST) begins, extinguishing the Heartbeat LED. 3.
D 2 – General Description Chassis Controls and LEDs 2.1.2 Chassis LEDs The chassis LEDs shown in Figure 2-3 provide status information about switch operation. Refer to ”Port LEDs” on page 2-6 for information about port LEDs. Input Power LED (Green) L 0 A L 1 A L 2 A L 3 A L 4 A L 5 A L 6 A L 7 Heartbeat LED (Green) System Fault LED (Amber) Figure 2-3. Chassis LEDs 2.1.2.1 Input Power LED (Green) The Input Power LED indicates the voltage status at the switch logic circuitry.
D 2 – General Description Fibre Channel Ports 2.1.2.3 System Fault LED (Amber) The System Fault LED illuminates to indicate an over temperature condition or a POST error. The Heartbeat LED shows a blink code for POST errors and the over temperature condition. Refer to ”Heartbeat LED Blink Patterns” on page 5-2 for more information about Heartbeat LED blink patterns. 2.2 Fibre Channel Ports The SANbox 5200 switch has 16 Fibre Channel 1Gbps/2Gbps ports and 4 Fibre Channel 10 Gbps ports.
D 2 – General Description Fibre Channel Ports 2.2.1 Port LEDs Each port has its own Logged-In LED (L) and Activity LED (A) as shown in Figure 2-5. Logged-In LED (Green) Activity LED (Green) Logged-In LED (Green) Activity LED (Green) 18 16 L 8 A L 9 A L 10 A L 11 A L 12 A L 13 A L 14 A L 15 L A A A 17 19 L L A A 1Gbps/2Gbps Ports 10 Gbps Ports Figure 2-5. Port LEDs 2.2.1.
D 2 – General Description Fibre Channel Ports 2.2.2 Transceivers The SANbox 5200 switch supports SFP optical transceivers for the 1Gbps/2Gbps ports and XPAK optical transceivers for the 10 Gbps ports. A transceiver converts electrical signals to and from optical laser signals to transmit and receive data. Duplex fiber optic cables plug into the transceivers which then connect to the devices.
D 2 – General Description Ethernet Port 2.3 Ethernet Port The Ethernet port shown in Figure 2-6 is an RJ-45 connector that provides a connection to a management workstation through a 10/100 Base-T Ethernet cable. A management workstation can be a Windows®, Solaris™, or a Linux® workstation that is used to configure and manage the switch fabric. You can manage the switch over an Ethernet connection using SANbox Manager, the Command Line Interface (CLI), or SNMP.
D 2 – General Description Serial Port 2.4 Serial Port The SANbox 5200 switch is equipped with an RS-232 serial port for maintenance purposes. The serial port location is shown in Figure 2-7. You can manage the switch through the serial port using the CLI. Serial Port L 0 A L 1 A L 2 A L 3 A L 4 A Figure 2-7. Serial Port and Pin Identification The serial port connector requires a null-modem F/F DB9 cable.
D 2 – General Description Power Supply and Fans 2.5 Power Supply and Fans The power supply converts standard 110 or 230 VAC to DC voltages for the various switch circuits. Four internal fans provide cooling. The switch monitors internal air temperature, and therefore does not monitor or report fan operational status. Air flow can be front-to-back or back-to-front depending on the switch model.
D 2 – General Description Switch Management SNMP provides monitoring and trap functions for the fabric. SANbox firmware supports SNMP versions 1 and 2, the Fibre Alliance Management Information Base (FA-MIB) version 4.0, and the Fabric Element Management Information Base (FE-MIB) RFC 2837. Traps can be formatted using SNMP version 1 or 2.
2 – General Description Switch Management D Notes 2-12 59055-00 B
Section 3 Planning Consider the following when planning a fabric: Devices Device access Performance Port Licensing Multiple chassis fabrics Fabric security Fabric management 3.1 Devices When planning a fabric, consider the number of public devices and the anticipated demand. This will determine the number of ports that are needed and in turn the number of switches. Consider how many and what types of switches are needed.
D 3 – Planning Device Access 3.2 Device Access Consider device access needs within the fabric. Access is controlled by the use of zones and zone sets. Some zoning strategies include the following: Group devices by operating system. Separate devices that have no need to communicate with other devices in the fabric or have classified data. Separate devices into department, administrative, or other functional group. Reserve a path and its bandwidth from one port to another.
D 3 – Planning Device Access 3.2.1 Soft Zones Soft zoning divides the fabric for purposes of controlling device discovery. Devices in the same soft zone automatically discover and communicate freely with all other members of the same zone. The soft zone boundary is not secure; traffic across soft zones can occur if addressed correctly. The following rules apply to soft zones: Soft zones that include members from multiple switches need not include the ports of the inter-switch links.
D 3 – Planning Performance 3.3 Performance The SANbox 5200 switch supports class 2 and class 3 Fibre Channel service at transmission rates of 1 Gbps, 2 Gbps, or 10 Gbps with a maximum frame size of 2148 bytes. A 1Gbps/2Gbps port can transmit or receive at 1 Gbps or 2 Gbps depending on the device to which it is connected. The port discovers the transmission speed prior to login when the connected device powers up. 10 Gbps ports transmit at 10 Gbps.
D 3 – Planning Performance 3.3.2 Bandwidth Bandwidth is a measure of the volume of data that can be transmitted at a given transmission rate. A 1Gbps/2Gbps port can transmit or receive at 1 Gbps or 2 Gbps depending on the device to which it is connected. 10 Gbps ports transmit at 10 Gbps. The switch supports all transmission rate combinations as shown in Table 3-2. Table 3-2.
D 3 – Planning Port Licensing 3.3.3 Latency Latency is a measure of how fast a frame travels from one port to another. The factors that affect latency include transmission rate and the source/destination port relationship as shown in Table 3-3. Table 3-3. Port-to-Port Latency Source/Destination Rates Same Switch I 1 Gbps - 1 Gbps < 0.6 µsec 1 Gbps - 10 Gbps < 18 µsec 2 Gbps - 2 Gbps < 0.4 µsec 2 Gbps - 10 Gbps < 8 µsec 10 Gbps - 1 Gbps < 0.6 µsec 10 Gbps - 2 Gbps < 0.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics 3.5 Multiple Chassis Fabrics By connecting switches together you can expand the number of available ports for devices. Each switch in the fabric is identified by a unique domain ID, and the fabric will automatically resolve domain ID conflicts. You can connect up to four SANbox 5200 switches together through the 10 Gbps ports, thus preserving the user ports for devices. This is called stacking.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics 3.5.2 Domain ID, Principal Priority, and Domain ID Lock The following switch configuration settings affect multiple chassis fabrics: Domain ID Principal priority Domain ID lock The domain ID is a unique number from 1–239 that identifies each switch in a fabric. The principal priority is a number (1–255) that determines the principal switch which manages domain ID assignments for the fabric.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics 3.5.2.1 Stacking You can connect up to four 20-port SANbox 5200 switches together through the 10 Gbps ports, thus preserving the user ports for devices. This is called stacking. The following 2-, 3-, and 4-switch stacking configurations are recommended for best performance and redundancy. Each 10 Gbps port contributes 1 GBps of bandwidth between chassis with one chassis hop between any two ports.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics A four-switch stack uses six XPAK switch stacking cables as shown in Figure 3-3. 64 1Gbps/2Gbps ports are available for devices. Figure 3-3.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics 3.5.3 Common Topologies The SANbox 5200 switch supports the following topologies using the 1Gbps/2Gbps Fibre Channel ports: Cascade Mesh Multistage® 3.5.3.1 Cascade Topology A cascade topology describes a fabric in which the switches are connected in series. If you connect the last switch back to the first switch, you create a cascade-with-a-loop topology as shown in Figure 3-4.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics 3.5.3.2 Mesh Topology A mesh topology describes a fabric in which each chassis has at least one port directly connected to each other chassis in the fabric. Using 16-port SANbox 5200 switches the mesh fabric shown in Figure 3-5 has the following characteristics: Each link contributes up to 200 MB/s of bandwidth between switches, 400 MB/s in full duplex.
D 3 – Planning Multiple Chassis Fabrics 3.5.3.3 Multistage Topology A Multistage topology describes a fabric in which two or more edge switches connect to one or more core switches. Each additional core switch increases the bandwidth to each edge switch by 200 MB/s. Using 16-port SANbox 5200 switches, the Multistage fabric shown in Figure 3-6 has the following characteristics: Each link contributes up to 200 MB/s of bandwidth between chassis.
D 3 – Planning Fabric Security 3.6 Fabric Security Fabric security consists of the following: User account security Fabric services 3.6.1 User Account Security User account security consists of the administration of account names, passwords, expiration date, and authority level. If an account has Admin authority, all management tasks can be performed by that account in both SANbox Manager™ and the Telnet command line interface. Otherwise only monitoring tasks are available.
D 3 – Planning Fabric Management 3.6.2 Fabric Services Fabric services include security-related functions such as inband management and SNMP. Inband management is the ability to manage switches across inter-switch links using SANbox Manager, SNMP, management server, or the application programming interface. The switch comes from the factory with inband management enabled.
3 – Planning Fabric Management D Notes 3-16 59055-00 B
Section 4 Installation This section describes how to install and configure the SANbox 5200 switch. It also describes how to load new firmware and how to recover a disabled switch. 4.1 Site Requirements Consider the following items when installing a SANbox 5200 switch: Fabric management workstation Power requirements Environmental conditions 4.1.1 Fabric Management Workstation The requirements for fabric management workstations running SANbox Manager are described in Table 4-1: Table 4-1.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.1.3 Environmental Conditions Consider the factors that affect the climate in your facility such as equipment heat dissipation and ventilation. The switch requires the following operating conditions: Operating temperature range: 5 – 40°C (41 – 104°F) Relative humidity: 15 – 80%, non-condensing 4.2 Installing a Switch Unpack the switch and accessories.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch Installing a SANbox 5200 switch involves the following steps: 1. Mount the switch. 2. Install SFP transceivers. 3. Connect the switch to the AC power source. 4. Connect the management workstation to the switch. 5. Install the SANbox Manager application. 6. Configure the switch. 7. Cable devices to the switch. 4.2.1 Mount the Switch The switch can be placed on a flat surface and stacked or mounted in a 19” EIA rack.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch CAUTION! If the switch is mounted in a closed or multi-unit rack assembly, make sure that the operating temperature inside the rack enclosure does not exceed the maximum rated ambient temperature. Refer to ”Environmental” on page A-5. Do not restrict chassis air flow. Allow 16 cm (6.5 in) minimum clearance at the front and rear of the switch (surface mount) or rack for service access and ventilation.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch To mount the switch in a rack using the General Devices C-874 rail kit, you must fasten the switch brackets and inner rails to the switch as shown in Figure 4-3. Use the screws that come with the rail kit. Refer to the rail kit instructions for complete information. L 0 A L 1 A L 2 A L 3 A L 4 A L 5 A L 6 A L 7 A L A L A L A L A L A L A L L A L A 16 A L 17 A L 18 A L 19 A Figure 4-3. Mounting the Switch in a Rack with a Rail Kit 4.2.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch If you are using the 10 Gbps ports, remove the port covers by the cover tabs using your fingers or pliers as shown in Figure 4-4. A L A L L A L 16 A A L 17 A L 18 A L 19 A Figure 4-4. Removing 10 Gbps Port Covers To install XPAK switch stacking cables, position the cable connectors with the circuit board toward the mid line of the respective switch faceplates as show in Figure 4-5.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.3 Connect the Switch to AC Power WARNING!! This product is supplied with a 3-wire power cable and plug for the user’s safety. Use this power cable in conjunction with a properly grounded outlet to avoid electrical shock. An electrical outlet that is not correctly wired could place hazardous voltage on metal parts of the switch chassis. It is the responsibility of the customer to ensure that the outlet is correctly wired and grounded to prevent electrical shock.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch WARNUNG!! Dieses Produkt wird mit einem 3-adrigen Netzkabel mit Stecker geliefert. Dieses Kabel erfüllt die Sicherheitsanforderungen und sollte an einer vorschriftsmäßigen Schukosteckdose angeschlossen werden, um die Gefahr eines elektrischen Schlages zu vermeiden.Elektrosteckdosen, die nicht richtig verdrahtet sind, können gefährliche Hochspannung an den Metallteilen des switch-Gehäuses verursachen.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch The Heartbeat LED indicates the results of the POST. The POST tests the condition of firmware, memories, data-paths, and switch logic circuitry. If the Heartbeat LED blinks steadily about once per second, the POST was successful, and you can continue with the installation process. Any other blink pattern indicates that an error has occurred. Refer to ”Heartbeat LED Blink Patterns” on page 5-2 for more information about error blink patterns. 4.2.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.4.1 Ethernet Connection The default IP address of a new switch is 10.0.0.1. Many management workstations are not configured to communicate with the 10.0.0 subnet. Use the SANbox Manager Configuration Wizard to set the IP address of a new switch without re-configuring the management workstation. To establish an Ethernet connection, do the following: 1.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch d. Enter the following COM Port settings in the COM Properties window and choose the OK button. Bits per second: 9600 Data Bits: 8 Parity: None Stop Bits: 1 Flow Control: None For Linux: a. Set up minicom to use the serial port. Create or modify the /etc/minirc.dfl file with the following content. pr pu pu pu portdev/ttyS0 minit mreset mhangup pr portdev/ttyS0 specifies port 0 on the workstation.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.5 Install and Start SANbox Manager Using SANsurfer Management Suite If your switch was shipped with a SANsurfer Management Suite™ Disk, use the following instructions to install SANsurfer® on a Windows, Linux, or Solaris workstation. If your switch was shipped with a SANbox Manager Installation Disk, refer to ”Install and Start SANbox Manager Using the SANbox Manager Installation Disk” on page 4-15. 4.2.5.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.5.2 SANsurfer Management Suite Disk - Linux Installation To install the SANsurfer application on Linux from the SANsurfer Management Suite Disk, do the following: 1. Insert the SANsurfer Management Suite Disk into the management workstation CD-ROM drive. If a file browser dialog opens showing icons for the contents of the CD-ROM, double-click the Start_Here.htm file to open the SANsurfer Management Suite start page.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.5.3 SANsurfer Management Suite Disk - Solaris Installation To install the SANsurfer application on Solaris from the SANsurfer Management Suite CD-ROM, do the following: 1. Insert the SANsurfer Management Suite Disk into the management workstation CD-ROM drive. If the SANsurfer Management Suite start page does not open in your default browser, do the following: a. Right-click the Workspace Menu. b. Select File, then select File Manager. c.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.5.4 Starting SANsurfer Management Suite To start the SANsurfer application for the first time, choose one of the following methods: For a Windows platform, double-click the SANsurfer shortcut, or select SANsurfer from Start menu, depending on how you installed the SANsurfer application. From a command line, you can enter the SANsurfer command: \SANsurfer.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch 4.2.6.2 SANbox Manager Installation Disk - Linux Installation To install the SANbox Manager application on Linux from the SANbox Manager Installation Disk, do the following: 1. Insert the SANbox Manager Installation Disk into the management workstation CD-ROM drive. If a file browser does not open, double-click the CD-ROM icon to open the browser. Double click the SANbox_Manager folder, then double click the Linux folder.
D 4 – Installation Installing a Switch the SANbox Manager application. From a command line, you can enter the SANbox_Manager command: sanbox_manager.exe For a Linux platform, enter the SANbox_Manager command: SANbox_Manager For a Solaris platform, enter the SANbox_Manager command: SANbox_Manager The application opens with the Initial Start dialog.
D 4 – Installation Install Firmware 4.2.8 Cable Devices to the Switch Connect cables to the SFP transceivers and their corresponding devices, and then energize the devices. Device host bus adapters can have SFP (or SFF) transceivers or GigaBit Interface Converters (GBIC). LC-type duplex fiber optic cable connectors are designed for SFP transceivers, while SC-type connectors are designed for GBICs. Duplex cable connectors are keyed to ensure proper orientation.
D 4 – Installation Install Firmware You can use the SANbox Manager application or the CLI to install new firmware: The SANbox Manager application loads and unpacks the firmware image file in one operation. Refer to ”Using SANbox Manager to Install Firmware” on page 4-19. When using the CLI on a workstation that has an FTP server, you can open a Telnet session and load and unpack the firmware image file using the CLI Image command. Refer to ”Using the CLI to Install Firmware” on page 4-19.
D 4 – Installation Install Firmware 3. To start an admin session, enter the following: SANbox $> admin start 4. Retrieve the firmware file. The device on which the firmware file is stored must be running an FTP server. Enter the following command to retrieve the firmware file from the specified IP address: SANbox (admin) #> image fetch username 10.0.0.254 firmwarefilenametoload firmwarefilenameonswitch Connected to 10.0.0.254.
D 4 – Installation Install Firmware 3. Establish communications with the switch using the File Transfer Protocol (FTP). Enter one of the following on the command line: >ftp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx or >ftp switchname where xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the switch IP address, and switchname is the switch name associated with the IP address. 4. Enter the following account name and password: user:images password: images 5. Activate binary mode and copy the firmware image file on the switch: ftp>bin ftp>put filename 6.
4 – Installation Upgrading the SANbox 5200 Switch 13. D Review the conditions for a non-disruptive activation on page 4-18 and determine whether a non-disruptive activation is possible. Enter the Hotreset command to perform a non-disruptive activation. During a non-disruptive activation, all Logged-In LEDs are extinguished for several seconds. SANbox(admin) $>hotreset If a non-disruptive activation is not possible, a message will prompt you to perform a disruptive activation. SANbox (admin) $>reset 4.
D 4 – Installation Powering Down a Switch 4.5 Powering Down a Switch Simply unplugging the switch from the power source does not allow the switch to complete executing tasks and could lead to flash memory corruption. For this reason, open a Telnet session and use the Shutdown command to initiate an orderly shut down, then power down the switch by unplugging the power cord. Refer to the ”Shutdown Command” on page B-78.
4 – Installation Powering Down a Switch D Notes 4-24 59055-00 B
Section 5 Diagnostics/Troubleshooting Diagnostic information about the switch is available through the chassis LEDs and the port LEDs. Diagnostic information is also available through the SANbox Manager and CLI event logs and error displays. This section describes two types of diagnostics: Power-On Self Test (POST) and chassis. POST diagnostics describe the Heartbeat LED and the port Logged-In LED indications.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 5.1.1 Heartbeat LED Blink Patterns The Heartbeat LED indicates the operational status of the switch. When the POST completes with no errors, the Heartbeat LED blinks at steady rate of once per second. When the switch is in maintenance mode, the Heartbeat LED illuminates continuously. Refer to ”Recovering a Switch” on page 5-11 for more information about maintenance mode. All other blink patterns indicate critical errors.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 5.1.1.3 Configuration File System Error Blink Pattern A configuration file system error blink pattern is 4 blinks followed by a two second pause. The 4-blink error pattern indicates that a configuration file system error has occurred, and that the configuration file must be recreated. Refer to ”Recovering a Switch” on page 5-11 for more information.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 6. If a previously saved configuration file is available for the switch, do the following to restore the configuration file. a. Establish communications with the switch using the File Transfer Protocol (FTP). Enter one of the following on the command line: >ftp xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx or >ftp switchname where xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the switch IP address and switchname is the switch name associated with the IP address. b.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 5.1.1.4 Over Temperature Blink Pattern An over temperature blink pattern is 5 blinks followed by a two second pause. The 5-blink error pattern indicates that the air temperature inside the switch has exceeded the failure temperature threshold. The default failure temperature threshold is 70° C. You can set the failure temperature threshold using the Set Config System command. Refer to the ”Set Config Command” on page B-33 for more information.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 5.1.2 Logged-In LED Indications Port diagnostics are indicated by the Logged-In LED for each port as shown in Figure 5-1. Logged-In LED 16 18 L 0 A L 1 A L 2 A L 3 A L 4 A L 5 A L 6 A L 7 A L 8 A L 9 A L 10 A L 11 A L 12 A L 13 A L 14 A L 15 L A A A 17 19 L L A A Figure 5-1. Logged-In LED The Logged-In LED has three indications: Logged in - Continuous illumination.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 5.1.2.1 E_Port Isolation A Logged-In LED error indication is often the result of E_Port isolation. An isolated E_Port is indicated by a red link in the SANbox Manager topology display.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics 4. Display the active zone set on each switch using the Zoning Active command or the Active Zoneset tab of the SANbox Manager topology display. Compare the zone membership between the two active zone sets. Are they the same? Yes - Contact your authorized maintenance provider. No - Deactivate one of the active zone sets or edit the conflicting zones so that their membership is the same. Reset the port.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting POST Diagnostics Review the event browser to determine if excessive port errors are responsible for disabling the port. Look for a message that mentions one of the monitored error types indicating that the port has been disabled, then do the following: 1. 2. 3. 4. 59055-00 B Examine the alarm configuration for the associated error using the Show Config Threshold command or the SANbox Manager application. Refer to the ”Show Config Command” on page B-67.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting Chassis Diagnostics 5.2 Chassis Diagnostics Chassis diagnostics are indicated by the chassis LEDs as shown in Figure 5-3. Input Power LED (Green) L 0 A L 1 A L 2 A L 3 A Heartbeat LED (Green) System Fault LED (Amber) Figure 5-3. Chassis LEDs The following conditions are described: Input Power LED is extinguished System Fault LED is illuminated 5.2.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting Recovering a Switch 2. Inspect the AC power source. Is the power source delivering the proper voltage? Yes - Continue No - Make necessary repairs. If the condition remains, contact your authorized maintenance provider. 5.2.2 System Fault LED is Illuminated The System Fault LED illuminates to indicate that the switch logic circuitry is overheating or that a POST error has occurred. The System Fault LED is always accompanied by a Heartbeat LED error blink code.
5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting Recovering a Switch D To recover a switch, do the following: 1. Place the switch in maintenance mode. Press and hold the Maintenance button with a pointed tool for 2–7 seconds. When the Heartbeat LED alone is illuminated, release the button. 2. Allow one minute for the switch to complete its tests. When the switch is in maintenance mode, the Heartbeat LED illuminates continuously. All other chassis LEDs are extinguished. 3.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting Recovering a Switch 1. Place the switch in maintenance mode. Refer to the procedure for maintenance mode in ”Recovering a Switch” on page 5-11. 2. Use FTP to load a new firmware image file onto the switch. Refer to ”Using FTP and the CLI to Install Firmware” on page 4-20. Do not unpack the firmware image file with the Image command. 3. Select option 1 from the maintenance menu. When prompted for a file name prompt, enter the firmware image file name.
D 5 – Diagnostics/Troubleshooting Recovering a Switch 5.3.7 Maintenance – Remake Filesystem In the event of sudden loss of power, it is possible that the switch configuration may become corrupt. The file system on which the configuration is stored must be re-created. This option resets the switch to the factory default values including user accounts and zoning. Refer to Table B-3 though Table B-8 for the factory default values.
Appendix A Specifications This appendix contains the specifications for the SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel switch. Refer to Section 2 General Description for the location of all connections, switches, controls, and components. A.1 Fabric Specifications Fibre Channel Protocols ................. FC-PH Rev. 4.3 FC-PH-2 FC-PH-3 FC-AL Rev 4.6 FC-AL-2 Rev 7.0 FC-FLA FC-GS FC-GS-2 FC-GS-3 FC-FG FC-PLDA FC-Tape FC-VI FC-SW-2 Fibre Channel Element MIB RFC 2837 Fibre Alliance MIB Version 4.
D A – Specifications Fabric Specifications Number of Fibre Channel Ports ...... Variable and upgradable in the following configurations:: 8 1Gbps/2Gbps FC ports 12 1Gbps/2Gbps FC ports 16 1Gbps/2Gbps FC ports 16 1Gbps/2Gbps FC ports plus 4 10 Gbps FC ports Scalability........................................ Maximum 239 switches depending on configuration Maximum User Ports ...................... > 475,000 ports depending on configuration Buffer Credits..................................
D A – Specifications Maintainability A.2 Maintainability Diagnostics ..................................... Power-On Self Test (POST) tests all functional components except SFP transceivers. Port tests include online, internal, and external tests. User Interface .................................
A – Specifications Fabric Management D A.3 Fabric Management Management Methods .................... SANbox Manager Graphical User Interface Application Programming Interface Command Line Interface GS-3 Management Server SNMP FTP Maintenance Connection ................ RS-232 connector; null modem F/F DB9 cable Ethernet Connection ....................... RJ-45 connector; 10/100 BASE-T cable Switch Agent...................................
D A – Specifications Environmental A.6 Environmental Temperature Operating .................................. 5 to 40°C (41 to 104°F) Non-operating ........................... -40 to 70°C (-40 to 158°F) Humidity Operating .................................. 15% to 80%, non-condensing Non-operating ........................... 25% to 90%, non-condensing Altitude Operating .................................. 0 to 3048m (0 to 10,000 feet) Non-operating ...........................
A – Specifications Regulatory Certifications D A.7 Regulatory Certifications Safety Standards ............................ UL60950:2000 CSA 22.2 No. 60950-00 (Canada) EN60950:2000 (EC) CB Scheme-IEC 60950:1999 Emissions Standards ...................... FCC Part 15B Class A VCCI Class A ITE CISPR 22, Class A EN 55022, Class A Voltage Fluctuations ....................... EN 61000-3-3 Harmonics....................................... EN 61000-3-2 Immunity .........................................
Appendix B Command Line Interface The command line interface (CLI) enables you to perform a variety of fabric and switch management tasks through an Ethernet or a serial port connection. This section describes the following: Logging on to a switch User accounts Working with switch configurations Commands B.
B – Command Line Interface Working with Switch Configurations Note: D A switch supports a combined maximum of 19 logins or sessions reserved as follows: 4 logins or sessions for internal applications such as management server and SNMP 9 high priority Telnet sessions 6 logins or sessions for SANbox Manager inband and out-of-band logins, Application Programming Interface (API) inband and out-of-band logins, and Telnet logins. Additional logins will be refused. B.
D B – Command Line Interface Working with Switch Configurations Set Config commands with which you make modifications to the port, switch, port threshold alarm, or zoning configuration components as shown: SANbox #> admin start SANbox (admin) #> config edit default The config named default is being edited. SANbox (admin-config)#> set config port . . . SANbox (admin-config)#> set config switch . . . SANbox (admin-config)#> set config threshold . . . SANbox (admin-config)#> set config zoning . . .
B – Command Line Interface Working with Switch Configurations D You use FTP to download the configdata file to your workstation for safe keeping and to upload the file back to the switch for the restore function. To download the configdata file, open an FTP session on the switch and login with the account name images and password images. Transfer the file in binary mode with the Get command as shown: >ftp ip_address user:images password: images ftp>bin ftp>get configdata xxxxx bytes sent in xx secs.
D B – Command Line Interface Commands B.4 Commands The command syntax is as follows: command keyword keyword [value] keyword [value1] [value2] The Command is followed by one or more keywords. Consider the following rules and conventions: Commands and keywords are case insensitive. Required keyword values appear in standard font: [value]. Optional values are shown in italics: [value]. Underlined portions of the keyword in the command format indicate the abbreviated form that can be used.
D B – Command Line Interface Commands The command set performs monitoring and configuration tasks. Commands related to monitoring tasks are available to all account names. Commands related to configuration tasks are available only within an admin session. An account must have Admin authority to enter the Admin Start command, which opens an admin session. Refer to the ”Admin Command” on page B-7. The commands and their page numbers are listed in Table B-2. Table B-2.
D B – Command Line Interface Admin Command Admin Command Opens and closes an Admin session. The Admin session provides commands that change the fabric and switch configurations. Only one Admin session can be open on the switch at any time. An inactive Admin session will time out after a period of time which can be changed using the Set Setup System command. Refer to the ”Set Setup Command” on page B-50.
B – Command Line Interface Alias Command D Alias Command Creates a named set of ports/devices. Aliases make it easier to assign a set of ports/devices to many zones. An alias can not have a zone or another alias as a member.
D B – Command Line Interface Alias Command members [alias] Displays all members of the alias given by [alias]. This keyword does not require an admin session. remove [alias] [member_list] Removes the ports/devices given by [member_list] from the alias given by [alias]. Use a to delimit ports/devices in [member_list]. A port/device in [member_list] can have any of the following formats: Domain ID and port number pair (Domain ID, Port Number). Domain IDs can be 1–-239; port numbers can be 0–-255.
B – Command Line Interface Config Command D Config Command Manages the Fibre Channel configurations on a switch. For information about setting the port and switch configurations, refer to the ”Set Config Command” on page B-33.
D B – Command Line Interface Config Command restore Restores configuration settings to an out-of-band switch from a backup file named configdata, which must be first uploaded on the switch using FTP. You create the backup file using the Config Backup command. Use FTP to load the backup file on a switch, then enter the Config Restore command. After the restore is complete, the switch automatically resets. Refer to ”Backing up and Restoring Switch Configurations” on page B-3.
B – Command Line Interface Config Command D The following is an example of how to create a backup file (configdata) and download the file to the workstation.
D B – Command Line Interface Date Command Date Command This command displays or sets the system date and time. To set the date and time the information string must be provided in this format: MMDDhhmmCCYY. The new date and time takes effect immediately. Authority Admin session except to display the date. Syntax date [MMDDhhmmCCYY] Keywords [MMDDhhmmCCYY] Specifies the date – this requires an admin session.
D B – Command Line Interface Fallback Command Fallback Command Assigns the pending firmware status back and forth between the active and inactive firmware images stored in switch memory. Authority Admin session Syntax Notes fallback Examples The Show Switch command displays the two firmware images, active firmware, inactive firmware, and pending firmware versions. After executing the Fallback command, reset the switch to activate the pending firmware.
D B – Command Line Interface Feature Command Feature Command Adds license key features to the switch and displays the license key feature log. To order a license key contact your switch distributor or your authorized reseller. After the upgrade is complete, the switch automatically resets. Authority Admin session for Add keyword only Syntax feature add [license_key] log Keywords add [license_key] Adds the feature that corresponds to the value given by [license_key]. [license_key] is case insensitive.
B – Command Line Interface Hardreset Command D Hardreset Command Resets the switch and performs a power-on self test. This reset disrupts traffic, activates the pending firmware, and clears the alarm log. To save the alarm log before resetting, refer to the ”Set Log Command” on page B-45. Authority Admin session Syntax Notes hardreset To reset the switch without a power-on self test, refer to the ”Reset Command” on page B-26.
D B – Command Line Interface Help Command Help Command Displays a brief description of the specified command, its keywords, and usage. Authority None Syntax Keywords help [command] [keyword] [command] Displays a summary of the command given by [command] and its keywords. If you omit [command], the system displays all available commands. [keyword] Displays a summary of the keyword given by [keyword] belonging to the command given by [command].
D B – Command Line Interface History Command History Command Displays a numbered list of the previously entered commands from which you can re-execute selected commands. Authority None Syntax Notes history Examples Use the History command to provide context for the ! command: Enter ![command] to re-enter the most recent execution of that command.
D B – Command Line Interface Hotreset Command Hotreset Command Resets the switch for the purpose of activating the pending firmware without disrupting traffic. This command terminates all management sessions, saves all configuration information, and clears the alarm log. After the pending firmware is activated, the configuration is recovered. This process takes less than 80 seconds. To save the alarm log to a file before resetting, refer to the ”Set Log Command” on page B-45.
B – Command Line Interface Image Command D Image Command Manages and installs switch firmware. Authority Admin session Syntax image cleanup fetch [account_name] [ip_address] [file_source] [file_destination] list unpack [file] Keywords cleanup Removes all firmware image files from the switch. All firmware image files are removed automatically each time the switch is reset.
D B – Command Line Interface Lip Command Lip Command Reinitializes the specified loop port. Authority Admin session Syntax Keywords lip [port_number] Examples The following is an example of the Lip command: [port_number] The number of the port to be reinitialized.
D B – Command Line Interface Passwd Command Passwd Command Changes a user account’s password. Authority Admin account name and an admin session to change another account’s password; You can change you own password without an Admin session. Syntax Keywords passwd [account_name] Examples The following is an example of the Passwd command: [account_name] The user account name. To change the password for an account name other than your own, you must open an admin session with the account name Admin.
D B – Command Line Interface Ping Command Ping Command Initiates an attempt to communicate with another switch over an Ethernet network and reports the result. Authority None Syntax ping ip_address Keywords ip_address The IP address of the switch to query. Examples The following is an example of a successful Ping command: SANbox #> ping 10.20.11.57 Ping command issued. Waiting for response... SANbox #> Response successfully received from 10.20.11.57.
D B – Command Line Interface Ps Command Ps Command Displays current system process information. Authority None Syntax Examples ps The following is an example of the Ps command: SANbox #> ps PID B-24 PPID %CPU TIME ELAPSED COMMAND 338 327 0.0 00:00:00 3-01:18:35 cns 339 327 0.0 00:00:01 3-01:18:35 ens 340 327 0.0 00:00:21 3-01:18:35 dlog 341 327 0.1 00:05:35 3-01:18:35 ds 342 327 0.2 00:11:29 3-01:18:35 mgmtApp 343 327 0.0 00:00:04 3-01:18:35 fc2 344 327 0.
D B – Command Line Interface Quit Command Quit Command Closes the Telnet session. Authority None Syntax Notes quit, exit, or logout 59055-00 B You can also enter Control-D to close the Telnet session.
D B – Command Line Interface Reset Command Reset Command Resets the switch configuration parameters. If you omit the keyword, the default is Reset Switch. Authority Admin session Syntax reset config [config_name] factory port [port_number] snmp switch (default) system zoning Keywords config [config_name] Resets the configuration given by [config_name] to the factory default values for switch, port, port threshold alarm, and zoning configuration.
D B – Command Line Interface Reset Command Clears the alarm log. To save the alarm log before resetting, refer to the ”Set Log Command” on page B-45. To reset the switch with a power-on self test, refer to the ”Hardreset Command” on page B-16. To reset the switch without disrupting traffic, refer to the ”Hotreset Command” on page B-19. system Resets the system configuration settings to the factory default values. Refer to Table B-8 for system configuration default values.
D B – Command Line Interface Reset Command Table B-4.
D B – Command Line Interface Reset Command Table B-5.
D B – Command Line Interface Reset Command Table B-7. SNMP Configuration Defaults Parameter Default SNMPEnabled True Contact Location Description SANbox 5200 FC Switch Trap [1-5] Address Trap 1: 10.0.0.254; Traps 2–5: 0.0.0.0 Trap [1-5] Port 162 Trap [1-5] Severity Warning Trap [1-5] Version 2 Trap [1-5] Enabled False ObjectID 1.3.6.14.1.1663.1.1.1.1.17 AuthFailureTrap False ProxyEnabled True Table B-8.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Command Set Command Sets a variety of switch parameters. Authority Admin session for all keywords except Beacon and Pagebreak which are available without an Admin session. Syntax set alarm clear beacon [state] config [option] log [option] pagebreak [state] port [option] setup [option] switch [state] Keywords alarm clear Clears the alarm log. beacon [state] Enables or disables the flashing of the Logged-In LEDs according to [state].
B – Command Line Interface Set Command D port [option] Sets port state and speed for the specified port. The previous Set Config Port settings are restored after a switch reset or a reactivation of a switch configuration. Refer to the ”Set Port Command” on page B-48. setup [option] Changes SNMP and system configuration settings. Refer to the ”Set Setup Command” on page B-50. switch [state] Changes the administrative state for all ports on the switch to the state given by [state].
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command Set Config Command Sets switch, port, port threshold alarm, and zoning configuration parameters. The changes you make with this command are not retained when you reset or power cycle the switch unless you save them using the Config Save command. Refer to the ”Config Command” on page B-10.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command Table B-9. Set Config Port Parameters (Continued) Parameter B-34 Description PortType Port type: 1Gbps/2Gbps Ports: GL, G, F, FL, Donor. The default is GL. 10 Gbps Ports: G SymbolicPortName Descriptive name for the port. The name can be up to 32 characters excluding #, semicolon (;), and comma (,). The default is Port n where n is the port number. ALFairness (1Gbps/2Gbps ports only) Arbitration loop fairness.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command Table B-9. Set Config Port Parameters (Continued) Parameter 59055-00 B Description LCFEnable Link control frame preference routing. Enables (True) or disables (False) preferred routing of frames with R_CTL = 1100 (Class 2 responses). The default is False. Enabling LCFEnable will disable MFSEnable. MFSEnable Multi-Frame Sequence bundling. Prevents (True) or allows (False) the interleaving of frames in a sequence. The default is False.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command switch Initiates an editing session in which to change switch configuration settings. The system displays each parameter one line at a time and prompts you for a value. For each parameter, enter a new value or press the Enter key to accept the current value shown in brackets. Table B-10 describes the Set Config Switch parameters. Table B-10.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command Table B-10. Set Config Switch Parameters (Continued) Parameter Description E_D_TOV Error Detect Timeout Value. The number of milliseconds a port is to wait for errors to clear. The default is 2000. PrincipalPriority The priority used in the FC-SW-2 principal switch selection algorithm. 1 is high, 255 is low. The default is 254. ConfigDescription Switch configuration description.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command Table B-11. Set Config Threshold Parameters Parameter B-38 Description Threshold Monitoring Enabled Master enable/disable parameter for all events. Enables (True) or disables (False) the generation of all enabled event alarms. The default is False. CRCErrorsMonitoringEnabled DecodeErrorsMonitoringEnabled ISLMonitoringEnabled LoginMonitoringEnabled LogoutMonitoringEnabled LOSMonitoringEnabled The event type enable/disable parameter.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command zoning Initiates an editing session in which to change switch zoning attributes. The system displays each parameter one line at a time and prompts you for a value. For each parameter, enter a new value or press the Enter key to accept the current value shown in brackets. Table B-12.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command Examples The following is an example of the Set Config Port command: SANbox #> admin start SANbox (admin) #> config edit SANbox (admin-config) #> set config port 1 A list of attributes with formatting and current values will follow. Enter a new value or simply press the ENTER key to accept the current value. If you wish to terminate this process before reaching the end of the list press 'q' or 'Q' and the ENTER key to do so.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command The following is an example of the Set Config Port command for a 10 Gbps port: SANbox #> admin start SANbox (admin) #> config edit SANbox (admin-config) #> set config port 16 A list of attributes with formatting and current values will follow. Enter a new value or simply press the ENTER key to accept the current value. If you wish to terminate this process before reaching the end of the list press 'q' or 'Q' and the ENTER key to do so.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command The following is an example of the Set Config Switch command: SANbox #> admin start SANbox (admin) #> config edit SANbox (admin-config) #> set config switch A list of attributes with formatting and default values will follow. Enter a new value or simply press the ENTER key to accept the current value. If you wish to terminate this process before reaching the end of the list press 'q' or 'Q' and the ENTER key to do so.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command RisingTrigger (decimal value, 1-1000) [200 ] FallingTrigger (decimal value, 0-1000) [0 ] SampleWindow (decimal value, 1-1000 sec) [10 ] ISLMonitoringEnabled (True / False) [True ] RisingTrigger (decimal value, 1-1000) [2 ] FallingTrigger (decimal value, 0-1000) [0 ] SampleWindow (decimal value, 1-1000 sec) [10 ] (True / False) [True ] RisingTrigger (decimal value, 1-1000) [5 ] FallingTrigger (decimal value, 0-1000) [1 ] S
D B – Command Line Interface Set Config Command The following is an example of the Set Config Zoning command. SANbox #> admin start SANbox (admin) #> config edit SANbox (admin-config) #> set config zoning A list of attributes with formatting and current values will follow. Enter a new value or simply press the ENTER key to accept the current value. If you wish to terminate this process before reaching the end of the list press 'q' or 'Q' and the ENTER key to do so.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Log Command Set Log Command Specifies the type of entries to be entered in the event log. Log entries are created for ports, components, and event severity levels.
B – Command Line Interface Set Log Command D Port Monitors all port events Switch Monitors switch management events. Zoning Monitors zoning conflict events. level [level] Specifies the severity level given by [level] to use in monitoring events for the specified components or ports. [level] can be one of the following values: Critical Monitors critical events. Warn Monitors warning events. Info Monitors informational events.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Log Command stop Stops logging of events. Notes 59055-00 B To maintain optimal switch performance, do not set the Component keyword to All and the Level keyword to Info at the same time.
B – Command Line Interface Set Port Command D Set Port Command Sets port state and speed for the specified port temporarily until the next switch reset or new configuration activation. This command also clears port counters. Authority Admin session except for the Clear keyword. Syntax set port [port_number] bypass [alpa] clear enable speed [transmission_speed] state [state] Keywords [port_number] Specifies the port. Ports are numbered beginning with 0.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Port Command Diagnostics Prepares the port for testing. This prepares the port for testing and prevents the port from accepting a device login. Down Disables the port by removing power from the port lasers.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Setup Command Set Setup Command Changes SNMP and system configuration settings. The switch maintains one SNMP configuration and one system configuration. Authority Admin session Syntax set setup snmp system Keywords snmp Prompts you in a line-by-line fashion to change SNMP configuration settings. Table B-13 describes the SNMP fields. For each parameter, enter a new value or press the Enter key to accept the current value shown in brackets. Table B-13.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Setup Command Table B-13. SNMP Configuration Settings (Continued) Entry Description ReadCommunity Read community password that authorizes an SNMP agent to read information from the switch. This is a write-only field. The value on the switch and the SNMP management server must be the same. The read community password can be up to 32 characters excluding #, semicolon (;), and comma (,). The default is “public”.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Setup Command Table B-14. System Configuration Settings (Continued) Entry B-52 Description Eth0NetworkMask Ethernet subnet mask address. Eth0GatewayAddress Ethernet IP address gateway. AdminTimeout Specifies the amount of time in minutes the switch waits before terminating an idle Admin session. Zero (0) disables the time out threshold. The default is 30, the maximum is 1440.
D Examples B – Command Line Interface Set Setup Command The following is an example of the Set Setup SNMP command: SANbox #> admin start SANbox (admin) #> set setup snmp A list of attributes with formatting and current values will follow. Enter a new value or simply press the ENTER key to accept the current value. If you wish to terminate this process before reaching the end of the list press 'q' or 'Q' and the ENTER key to do so.
D B – Command Line Interface Set Setup Command TrapCommunity (string, max=32 chars) [public ] AuthFailureTrap (True / False) [False ] ProxyEnabled (True / False) [True ] The following is an example of the Set Setup System command: SANbox (admin) #> set setup system A list of attributes with formatting and current values will follow. Enter a new value or simply press the ENTER key to accept the current value.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command Show Command Displays fabric, switch, and port operational information. Authority None Syntax show about alarm broadcast chassis config [option] domains donor fabric fdmi [node_wwn] interface log [option] lsdb mem [count] ns [option] pagebreak perf [option] port [port_number] post log setup [option] steering [domain_id] support switch topology users version Keywords about Displays an introductory set of information about operational attributes of the switch.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command config [option] Displays switch, port, and zoning configuration attributes. Refer to the ”Show Config Command” on page B-67. domains Displays list of each domain and its worldwide name in the fabric. donor Displays list of current donor configuration for all ports. fabric Displays list of each domain, symbolic name, worldwide name, node IP address, and port IP address.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command ns [option] Displays name server information for the specified [option]. If you omit [option], name server information for the local domain ID is displayed. [option] can have the following values: all Displays name server information for all switches and ports. [domain_id] Displays name server information for the switch given by [domain_id]. [domain_id] is a switch domain ID. [port_id] Displays name server information for the port given by [port_id].
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command Table B-15. Show Port Parameters (Continued) Entry B-58 Description EpConnects Number of times an E_Port connected through ISL negotiation. FBusy Number of times the switch sent a F_BSY because Class 2 frame could not be delivered within ED_TOV time. Number of class 2 and class 3 fabric busy (F_BSY) frames generated by this port in response to incoming frames.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command Table B-15. Show Port Parameters (Continued) Entry Description PrimSeqErrors Primitive sequence errors detected. RxLinkResets Number of link reset primitives received from an attached device. RxOfflineSeq Number of offline sequences received. An OLS is issued for link initialization, a Receive & Recognize Not_Operational (NOS) state, or to enter the offline state. TotalErrors Total number of errors detected.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command support Executes a series of commands that display a complete description of the switch, its configuration, and operation. The display can be captured from the screen and used for diagnosing problems. This keyword is intended for use at the request of your authorized maintenance provider.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command The following is an example of the Show Domains command: SANbox #> show domains Principal switch is (remote): 10:00:00:60:69:50:0b:6c Upstream Principal ISL is : 1 Domain ID List: Domain 97 (0x61) WWN = 10:00:00:c0:dd:00:71:ed Domain 98 (0x62) WWN = 10:00:00:60:df:22:2e:0c Domain 99 (0x63) WWN = 10:00:00:c0:dd:00:72:45 Domain 100 (0x64) WWN = 10:00:00:c0:dd:00:ba:68 Domain 101 (0x65) WWN = 10:00:00:60:df:22:2e:06 Domain 102 (0x66) WWN = 10:00:00:c0
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command The following is an example of the Show NS [port_ID] command: SANbox #> show ns 1301e1 Port ID: 1301e1 -------PortType NL PortWWN 21:00:00:20:37:73:13:69 SymbolicPortName NodeWWN 20:00:00:20:37:73:13:69 SymbolicNodeName NodeIPAddress 0.0.0.0 ClassOfService 3 PortIPAddress 0.0.0.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command The following is an example of the Show Port command: SANbox #> show port 1 Port Number: 1 -----------AdminState Online PortID 150100 AsicNumber 0 PortWWN 20:01:00:c0:dd:00:bc:b8 AsicPort 1 RunningType Unknown ConfigType G SFPPartNumber Unknown DiagStatus Passed SFPRevision 0 EpConnState None SFPType NotInstalled EpIsoReason NotApplicable SFPVendor Unknown LinkSpeed 2Gb/s SFPVendorID 00000000 LinkState Inactive SymbolicName Port1
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command The following is an example of the Show Switch command: SANbox #> show switch Switch Information -----------------SymbolicName sw .108 SwitchWWN 100000c0dd00bc56 SwitchType SANbox 5200 BootVersion V1.0.0.7-0 (Mon Nov CreditPool 0 DomainID 19 (0x13) FirstPortAddress 130000 FlashSize - MBytes 128 LogLevel Critical NumberOfResets 224 ReasonForLastReset PowerUp SWImageVersion (1) - build date V4.0.0.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command The following is an example of the Show Topology command for port 1: SANbox #> show topology 1 Local Link Information ---------------------PortNumber 1 PortID 650100 PortWWN 20:01:00:c0:dd:00:91:11 PortType F Remote Link Information ----------------------Device 0 NodeWWN 50:80:02:00:00:06:d5:38 PortType NL Description (NULL) IPAddress 0.0.0.0 Device 1 NodeWWN 20:00:00:20:37:2b:08:c9 PortType NL Description (NULL) IPAddress 0.0.0.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Command The following is an example of the Show Version command: SANbox #> show version ***************************************************** * * * Command Line Interface SHell (CLISH) * * * ***************************************************** SystemDescription SANbox 5200 FC Switch Eth0NetworkAddress 10.20.11.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Config Command Show Config Command Displays switch, port, alarm threshold, and zoning for the current configuration. Authority None Syntax show config port [port_number] switch threshold zoning Keywords port [port_number] Displays configuration parameters for the port number given by [port_number]. Ports are numbered beginning with 0. If [port_number] is omitted, all ports are specified. switch Displays configuration parameters for the switch.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Config Command The following is an example of the Show Config Port command for a 10 Gbps port: SANbox #> show config port 16 Configuration Name: default ------------------Port Number: 16 -----------AdminState Online LinkSpeed 10Gb/s PortType G SymbolicName 10G-16 DeviceScanEnabled True ForceOfflineRSCN False LCFEnabled False MFSEnabled False MSEnabled True IOStreamGuard Disabled VIEnabled False PDISCPingEnabled True The following is an example of t
D B – Command Line Interface Show Config Command SANbox #> show config threshold Configuration Name: default ------------ Threshold Configuration Information ----------------------------------ThresholdMonitoringEnabled False CRCErrorsMonitoringEnabled True RisingTrigger 25 FallingTrigger 1 SampleWindow 10 DecodeErrorsMonitoringEnabled True RisingTrigger 25 FallingTrigger 0 SampleWindow 10 ISLMonitoringEnabled True RisingTrigger 2 FallingTrigger 0 SampleWindow 10 LoginMonitoringEna
B – Command Line Interface Show Log Command D Show Log Command Displays the contents of the log or the parameters used to create entries in the log. The log contains a maximum of 200 entries. When the log reaches its entry capacity, subsequent entries overwrite the existing entries, beginning with the oldest. Authority None Syntax show log component level options port settings Keywords component Displays the components currently being monitored for events.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Log Command level Displays the event severity level needed to create an entry in the log. If the severity level occurs on a port or on a component which is not defined, no entry is made in the log. The severity levels are as follows: Critical Monitors critical events. Warn Monitors warning events. Info Monitors informational events. None Monitors none of the severity levels. options Displays the options used to set the component and severity level attributes.
B – Command Line Interface Show Log Command D The following is an example of the Show Log command: SANbox #> show log [327][day month date time year][I][Eport Port:0/8][Eport State= E_A0_GET_DOMAIN_ID] [328][day month date time year][I][Eport Port: 0/8][FSPF PortUp state=0] [329][day month date time year][I][Eport Port: 0/8][Sending init hello] [330][day month date time year][I][Eport Port: 0/8][Processing EFP, oxid= 0x8] [331][day month date time year][I][Eport Port: 0/8][Eport State = E_A2_IDLE] [332][d
D B – Command Line Interface Show Perf Command Show Perf Command Displays port performance in frames/second and bytes/second. If you omit the keyword, the command displays data transmitted (out), data received (in), and total data transmitted and received in frames/second and bytes per second.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Perf Command errors [port_number] Displays continuous error counts for the port group (0–15 or 16–19) that includes [port_number]. If you omit [port_number], ports 0–15 are displayed. Type “q” and press the Enter key to stop the display.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Perf Command The following is an example of the Show Perf Byte command: SANbox #> show perf byte Displaying bytes/sec (total)...
D B – Command Line Interface Show Setup Command Show Setup Command Displays the current SNMP and system settings. Authority None Syntax show setup mfg snmp system Keywords mfg Displays manufacturing information about the switch. snmp Displays the current SNMP settings. system Displays the current system settings.
D B – Command Line Interface Show Setup Command Trap1Enabled False Trap2Address 0.0.0.0 Trap2Port 162 Trap2Severity warning Trap2Version 2 Trap2Enabled False Trap3Address 0.0.0.0 Trap3Port 162 Trap3Severity warning Trap3Version 2 Trap3Enabled False Trap4Address 0.0.0.0 Trap4Port 162 Trap4Severity warning Trap4Version 2 Trap4Enabled False Trap5Address 0.0.0.0 Trap5Port 162 Trap5Severity warning Trap5Version 2 Trap5Enabled False ObjectID 1.3.6.1.4.1.1663.1.1.1.1.
B – Command Line Interface Shutdown Command D Shutdown Command Terminates all data transfers on the switch at convenient points and closes the Telnet session. Always power cycle the switch after entering this command. Authority Admin session Syntax Notes shutdown Always use this command to perform an orderly shut down before removing power from the switch. When the shutdown is complete, the Heartbeat LED is extinguished.
D B – Command Line Interface Test Command Test Command Tests ports using internal (SerDes level), external (transceiver), and online loopback tests. Internal and external tests require that the port be placed in diagnostic mode. Refer to the ”Set Command” on page B-31 for information about changing the port administrative state. While the test is running, the remaining ports on the switch remain fully operational.
D B – Command Line Interface Test Command 1. To start an admin session, enter the following command and press the Enter key. admin start 2. Place the port in Diagnostics mode, enter the following command (x = port number) and press the Enter key. set port x state diagnostics 3. Choose the type of port loopback test to run: To run an internal loopback test, enter the following: test port x internal To run an external loopback test, enter the following command.
D B – Command Line Interface Test Command 3. A series of test parameters are displayed on the screen. Press the Enter key to accept each default parameter value, or type a new value for each parameter and press the Enter key. The TestLength parameter is the number of frames sent, the FrameSize (256 byte maximum in some cases) parameter is the number of bytes in each frame, and the DataPattern parameter is the pattern in the payload.
D B – Command Line Interface Uptime Command Uptime Command Displays the elapsed up time since the switch was last reset and reset method. A hot reset or non-disruptive firmware activation does not reset the elapsed up time reported by this command.
D B – Command Line Interface User Command User Command Administers and displays user accounts. Authority Admin account name and an Admin session. The Accounts and List keywords are available to all account names without an Admin session. Syntax user accounts add delete [account_name] edit list Keywords accounts Displays all user accounts that exist on the switch. This keyword is available to all account names without an Admin session. add Add a user account to the switch.
D B – Command Line Interface User Command Examples The following is an example of the User Accounts command: SANbox (admin) #> user accounts Current list of user accounts ----------------------------images (admin authority = False, never expires) admin (admin authority = True , never expires) chuckca (admin authority = False, expires in < 50 days) gregj (admin authority = True , expires in < 100 days) fred (admin authority = True , never expires) The following is an example of the User Add com
D B – Command Line Interface User Command The following is an example of the User Delete command: SANbox (admin) #> user del user3 The user account will be deleted. Please confirm (y/n): [n] y The following is an example of the User List command: SANbox (admin) #> user list 59055-00 B User Ethernet Addr-Port Logged in Since ---- ------------------ --------------- admin@OB-session1 10.20.68.108-1031 day month date time year admin@OB-session2 10.20.68.
D B – Command Line Interface Whoami Command Whoami Command Displays the account name, session number, and switch domain ID for the Telnet session.
D B – Command Line Interface Zone Command Zone Command Manages zones and zone membership on a switch. Authority Admin session and a Zoning Edit session. Refer to the ”Zoning Command” on page B-93 for information about starting a Zoning Edit session. The List, Members, and Zonesets keywords are available without an Admin session.
B – Command Line Interface Zone Command D list Displays a list of all zones and the zone sets of which they are components. This keyword does not require an Admin session. members [zone] Displays all members of the zone given by [zone]. This keyword does not require an Admin session. remove [zone] [member_list] Removes the ports/devices given by [member_list] from the zone given by [zone]. Use a to delimit aliases and ports/devices in [member_list].
D Examples B – Command Line Interface Zone Command The following is an example of the Zone List command: SANbox #> zone list Zone ZoneSet ------------------wwn_b0241f zone_set_1 wwn_23bd31 zone_set_1 wwn_221416 zone_set_1 wwn_2215c3 zone_set_1 wwn_0160ed zone_set_1 wwn_c001b0 zone_set_1 wwn_401248 zone_set_1 wwn_02402f zone_set_1 wwn_22412f zone_set_1 The following is an example of the Zone Members command: SANbox #> zone members wwn_b0241f Current List of Members for Zone: wwn_b0241f -------
B – Command Line Interface Zone Command D The following is an example of the Zone Zonesets command: SANbox #> zone zonesets zone1 Current List of ZoneSets for Zone: zone1 ---------------------------------zone_set_1 B-90 59055-00 B
D B – Command Line Interface Zoneset Command Zoneset Command Manages zone sets and component zones across the fabric. Authority Admin session and a Zoning Edit session. Refer to the ”Zoning Command” on page B-93 for information about starting a Zoning Edit session. The Active, List, and Zones keywords are available without an Admin session. You must close the Zoning Edit session before using the Activate and Deactivate keywords.
D B – Command Line Interface Zoneset Command list Displays a list of all zone sets. This keyword does not require an Admin session. remove [zone_set] [zone_list] Removes a list of zones given by [zone_list] from the zone set given by [zone_set]. Use a to delimit zone names in [zone_list]. If [zone_set] is the active zone set, the zone will not be removed until the zone set has been deactivated.
D B – Command Line Interface Zoning Command Zoning Command Opens a Zoning Edit session in which to create and manage zone sets and zones. Refer to the ”Zone Command” on page B-87 and the ”Zoneset Command” on page B-91. Authority Admin session except for the Active, History, Limits, and List keywords. Syntax zoning active cancel clear edit history limits list restore save Keywords active Displays information for the active zone set including component zones and zone members.
D B – Command Line Interface Zoning Command limits Displays the number of zone sets, zones, aliases, members per zone, members per alias, and total members in the zoning database. This keyword also displays the switch zoning database limits, excluding the active zone set, which are described in Table B-16. This keyword does not require an Admin session. Table B-16.
D B – Command Line Interface Zoning Command SANbox (admin-zoning) #> . . SANbox (admin-zoning) #> zoning cancel Zoning edit mode will be canceled.
D B – Command Line Interface Zoning Command The following is an example of the Zoning List command: SANbox #> zoning list Active ZoneSet Information ZoneSet Zone ZoneMember -------------------------------wwn wwn_b0241f 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:c2 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:d2 21:00:00:e0:8b:02:41:2f wwn_23bd31 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:c2 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:d2 10:00:00:00:c9:23:bd:31 wwn_221416 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:c2 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:d2 10:00:00:00:c9:22:14:16 wwn_2215c3 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:c2 50:06:04:8
D B – Command Line Interface Zoning Command wwn_221416 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:c2 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:d2 10:00:00:00:c9:22:14:16 wwn_2215c3 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:c2 50:06:04:82:bf:d2:18:d2 10:00:00:00:c9:22:15: 59055-00 B B-97
B – Command Line Interface Zoning Command D Notes B-98 59055-00 B
Glossary Access Control List Zone Access Control List zoning divides the fabric for purposes of controlling discovery and inbound traffic. Arbitrated Loop A Fibre Channel topology where ports use arbitration to establish a point-to-point circuit. Active Zone Set The zone set that defines the current zoning for the fabric. Arbitrated Loop Physical Address (AL_PA) A unique one-byte value assigned during loop initialization to each NL_Port on a loop.
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide Class 2 Service A service which multiplexes frames at frame boundaries to or from one or more N_Ports wit h acknowledgment provided. Fabric Device Management Interface An interface by which device host bus adapters can be managed through the fabric. Chassis Hop A measure of fabric latency represented by the ISL that any frame crosses when travelling from one switch to another.
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide FRU Field Replaceable Unit Heartbeat LED A chassis LED that indicates the status of the internal switch processor and the results of the Power-On Self-Test. Maintenance Button Formerly known as the Force PROM button. Momentary button on the switch used to reset the switch or place the switch in maintenance mode. Inactive Firmware The firmware image on the switch that is not in use. Maintenance Mode Formerly known as force PROM mode.
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide Pending Firmware The firmware image that will be activated upon the next switch reset. Target A storage device that responds to an initiator device. POST Power-On Self Test User Account An object stored on a switch that consists of an account name, password, authority level, and expiration date. Power-On Self Test Diagnostics that the switch chassis performs at start up. Principal Switch The switch in the fabric that manages domain ID assignments.
SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide D Zone Set A set of zones grouped together. The active zone set defines the zoning for a fabric. Zoning Database The set of zone sets, zones, and aliases stored on a switch.
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide Notes Glossary-6 59055-00 B
Index Numerics 10/100 Base-T straight cable 4-9 A access 3-2 Access Control List zone 3-3 account name 3-14, B-1, B-86 display B-86 ftp 5-4 maintenance mode 5-12 Activity LED 2-6, 2-8 Admin account name B-6 authority B-6 Admin command B-7 administrative state port B-48 switch B-32 air flow 2-10, A-5 alarm configuration B-37 configuration display B-67 log B-31, B-55 alias add members B-8 copy B-8 create B-8 delete B-8 delete members B-9 display list B-8 display members B-9 rename B-9 Alias command B-8 altit
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide stop B-47 external test B-79 restore default 5-13 save B-11 controls 2-2 credits 3-4, A-2 critical error 5-1 F D Date command B-13 device cabling 4-18 description 3-1 performance 3-7 diagnostics 5-1, 5-10, A-3 dimensions A-4 disk space 4-1 distance 3-4 domain ID 5-7 description 3-8 display B-56 lock 3-8 donor port 3-4, B-56 E E_Port 2-7, 5-7 emissions standards A-6 environmental conditions 4-2 specifications A-5 Ethernet connection 4-10 direct conn
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide FRU - See Field Replaceable Unit FTP - See File Transfer Protocol G G_Port 2-7 GBIC - See GigaBit Interface Converter generic ports 2-7 Gigabit Interface Converter 3-1 GL_Port 2-7 H Hardreset command B-16 harmonics A-6 HBA - See Host Bus Adapter Heartbeat LED 2-4, 5-2 heat output A-4 Help command B-17 History command B-18 host bus adapter 3-1, B-56 Hotreset command B-19 humidity 4-2, A-5 HyperTerminal application 4-10 I Image command B-20 immunity A
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide configuration reset B-27 interfaces B-56 non-critical error 5-1 non-disruptive activation 4-18, B-19 null modem F/F DB9 cable 4-9 O online test B-79 operating systems 4-1 over temperature 5-5 P page break B-31 Passwd command B-22 password 3-14 change B-22 file reset 5-13 maintenance mode 5-12 restore default 5-13 switch B-22 user account B-1 pending firmware 5-14 performance 3-4, 3-7 Ping command B-23 planning 3-1 port 10 Gbps 2-5 administrative stat
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide scalability A-2 security fabric 3-14 fabric services 3-15 user account 3-14 serial port 2-9, 4-9, 4-10 Set command B-31 Set Config command B-33 Set Log command B-45 Set Port command B-48 Set Setup command B-50 SFP - See Small Form-Factor Pluggable shock A-5 Show command B-55 Show Config command B-67 Show Log command B-70 Show Perf command B-73 Show Setup command B-76 Shutdown command B-78 Simple Network Management Protocol configuration B-50 configurat
D SANbox 5200 Fibre Channel Switch Installation Guide W Whoami command B-86 workstation 4-1, 4-9 worldwide name 3-2 WWN - See Worldwide Name limits 3-2, B-94 list definitions B-94 revert changes B-94 save edits B-94 Zoning command B-93 Z zone access control list 3-3 add member port B-87 conflict 5-8 copy B-87 create B-87 definition 3-2 delete B-87 delete member port B-88 list B-88 list members B-88 name server 3-3 rename B-88 type B-88 Zone command B-87 zone set 3-2 activate B-91 active B-93 add member