Sun Microsystems Computer Drive 2500 User Manual

Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array  
Hardware Installation Guide  
Sun Microsystems, Inc.  
www.sun.com  
Part No. 820-0015-10  
March 2007  
Submit comments about this document at: http://www.sun.com/hwdocs/feedback  
Preface xiii  
1. Tray Overviews  
1
Controller Tray and Drive Expansion Tray Power-Fan Assembly  
9
Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array 12  
Controller Tray and Drive Expansion Tray Power-Fan Assembly LEDs 13  
IOM LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2501 Array 15  
Disk Drives 16  
iii  
LEDs on the Disk Drives 18  
2. Installing Trays 23  
Preparing for the Installation 24  
Preparing the Universal Rail Kit 24  
Unpacking the Universal Rail Kit 24  
Loosening the Rail Adjustment Screws 24  
Preparing the Tray 25  
Attaching the Rails to a Cabinet 27  
Attaching the Universal Rail Kit to a Standard Sun or 19-Inch Cabinet With  
19-Inch Cabinet With Unthreaded Cabinet Rails 31  
Installing a Tray in a Cabinet 37  
Connecting the Power Cables 42  
Intertray Cabling 42  
Array Configuration Naming Convention 43  
Connecting Expansion Trays 44  
Cabling an Expansion Tray to a Controller Tray 45  
Cabling an Expansion Tray to Another Expansion Tray 45  
Drive Module Cable Labeling 47  
Example Label Abbreviation 47  
Simplex Configurations 47  
Next Steps 48  
iv Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
Attaching the Ethernet Ports to the LAN of the Management Host 50  
Attaching the Ethernet Ports to the Management Host Using an Ethernet  
Over Cable 51  
Connecting Data Hosts to the 2540 Array 51  
2540 Array Data Host Connection Topologies 52  
2540 Array Data Host Connections 54  
To Connect Data Hosts to a 2530 Array 58  
4. Powering On the Array 61  
Before Powering On 61  
Next Steps 64  
5. Data Hosts, HBAs, and Other Software 65  
Multipathing 66  
Setting Up a Data Host On a Solaris System 66  
To Obtain Sun Solaris 8 and 9 Data Host Software 67  
To Install the SAN 4.4 Data Host Software 67  
Contents  
v
To Obtain Traffic Manager for Operating Systems Other Than Solaris 68  
Enabling Multipathing Software 70  
Enabling Multipathing Software for Solaris 8 or 9 OS 70  
Enabling Multipathing Software for Solaris 10 OS 71  
6. Configuring IP Addressing 73  
About IP Addressing 73  
Configuring the IP Address of the Array Controllers 74  
Configuring Dynamic (DHCP) IP Addressing 74  
Configuring Static IP Addressing 75  
Using the Serial Port Interface to Assign IP Addresses 75  
To Connect a Terminal to the Serial Port 75  
To Establish a Connection With the Serial Port 77  
A. Configuring a DHCP Server 81  
Setting Up a Solaris DHCP Server 81  
B. Using DC Power 91  
DC Power Overview 91  
Installation Notes for DC Power 92  
vi Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
Connecting Power Cables 94  
Turning Off the DC Power During an Emergency 96  
Relocation Cautions 96  
Glossary 97  
Index 107  
Contents vii  
viii  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
FIGURE 2-6  
FIGURE 2-7  
FIGURE 2-8  
Inserting the Cabinet Rail Adapter Plate on the Cabinet Rail 32  
Adapter plate in place on the Cabinet Rail. 33  
Slide the flange of the rail behind the cabinet rail and between that and the hook of the rail  
FIGURE 2-9  
FIGURE 2-10  
FIGURE 2-11  
FIGURE 2-12  
FIGURE 2-13  
FIGURE 2-14  
FIGURE 2-15  
FIGURE 2-16  
FIGURE 2-17  
FIGURE 2-18  
FIGURE 2-19  
FIGURE 3-1  
FIGURE 3-2  
FIGURE 3-3  
FIGURE 3-4  
FIGURE 3-5  
FIGURE 3-6  
FIGURE 3-7  
FIGURE 3-8  
FIGURE 3-9  
FIGURE 3-10  
FIGURE 3-11  
FIGURE 4-1  
FIGURE B-1  
FIGURE B-2  
FIGURE B-3  
Tray Power Connectors and Switches 62  
Power Fan Assembly Locations. 92  
DC Power Connector Cable and Source Wires 92  
DC Power Module LEDs, Power Switch, and Power Cable Receptacle. 93  
x
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
TABLE 1-1  
TABLE 1-2  
TABLE 1-3  
TABLE 1-4  
TABLE 1-5  
TABLE 1-6  
TABLE 1-7  
TABLE 1-8  
TABLE 2-1  
TABLE 6-1  
TABLE B-1  
4
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Checklist 20  
Controller and Expansion Tray Configurations 43  
RJ45 to DIN Serial Cable Pinouts 76  
DC Power Module LEDs. 94  
xi  
xii  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
Preface  
The Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide describes how to  
install rack-mounting rails and array modules on the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series  
array.  
Host management, data host management, and remote command line interface (CLI)  
functions are performed by the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager software.  
For installation and initial configuration of the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series array,  
including firmware upgrades, initial array setup, partitioning domains, configuring  
storage, and configuring IP addressing, see the Sun StorageTek Common Array  
Manager Software Installation Guide.  
Before You Read This Book  
Before you begin to install the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series array, you must have  
already prepared the site as described in these books:  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Regulatory and Safety Compliance Manual  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Site Preparation Guide  
xiii  
   
How This Book Is Organized  
Chapter 1 provides an overview of the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series array and the  
hardware installation process.  
Chapter 2 describes how to install rack-mounting rails, controller modules, and  
expansion cabinets in three Sun cabinets.  
Chapter 3 describes how to connect the management host and data hosts to enable  
access to the array.  
Chapter 4 describes tray power-on procedures.  
Chapter 5 describes data host software and what you need to do to acquire and  
install it.  
Chapter 6 describes how to configure IP addressing on the local management host  
and the array controllers.  
Appendix A describes how to set up a DHCP server.  
Related Documentation  
Application  
Title  
Part Number  
Site planning information Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Site  
820-0024-nn  
Preparation Guide  
Late-breaking information Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release  
820-0031-nn  
820-0030-nn  
819-7035-nn  
not included in the  
information set  
Notes  
Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager  
Release Notes  
Instructions for installing  
the Common Array  
Manager host  
Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager  
Software Installation Guide  
management software  
Quick reference  
information for the CLI  
Sun StorageTek 6130, 2500 Series, and  
6540 Arrays sscs(1M) CLI Quick  
Reference  
820-0029-nn  
xiv Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
Application  
Title  
Part Number  
Regulatory and safety  
information  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array  
Regulatory and Safety Compliance Manual  
820-0025-nn  
Instructions for installing  
the Sun StorageTek  
Expansion cabinet  
Sun StorageTek Expansion Cabinet  
Installation and Service Manual  
805-3067-nn  
Instructions for installing  
the Sun Rack 900/1000  
cabinets  
Sun Rack Installation Guide  
816-6386-nn  
In addition, the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array includes the following online  
documentation:  
Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager online help  
Contains system overview and configuration information.  
Service Advisor  
Provides guided FRU replacement procedures with system feedback. You can  
access Service Advisor from the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager  
software.  
sscs man page commands for the CLI  
Provides help on man page commands available on a management host or on a  
remote CLI client.  
Accessing Sun Documentation  
You can obtain Sun network storage documentation at:  
http://www.sun.com/products-n-  
You can also view, print, or purchase a broad selection of other Sun documentation,  
including localized versions, at:  
Preface  
xv  
 
Third-Party Web Sites  
Sun is not responsible for the availability of third-party web sites mentioned in this  
document. Sun does not endorse and is not responsible or liable for any content,  
advertising, products, or other materials that are available on or through such sites  
or resources. Sun will not be responsible or liable for any actual or alleged damage  
or loss caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any such content,  
goods, or services that are available on or through such sites or resources.  
Contacting Sun Technical Support  
If you have technical questions about this product that are not answered in this  
document, go to:  
Sun Welcomes Your Comments  
Sun is interested in improving its documentation and welcomes your comments and  
suggestions. You can submit your comments by going to:  
Please include the title and part number of your document with your feedback:  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide, part number 820-0015-10.  
xvi Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
     
CHAPTER  
1
Tray Overviews  
The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array, the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array, and the Sun  
StorageTek 2501 Array are a family of storage products that provide high-capacity,  
high-reliability storage in a compact configuration.  
The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array is a modular, rackmountable controller tray. It is  
scalable from a single dual-controller tray (1x1) configuration to a maximum  
configuration of 1x3 with two additional drive expansion trays behind one controller  
tray.  
All three of the trays can be installed in the following cabinets:  
Sun Rack 900/1000 cabinet  
Sun StorageTek Expansion cabinet  
Any 19-inch wide, 4-post, EIA-compatible rack or cabinet with a front-to-back  
depth between vertical cabinet rails of 61 cm to 91 cm (24 in. to 36 in.). The  
cabinet can have threaded or unthreaded cabinet rails.  
The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array and the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array contain disk  
drives for storing data and controllers that provide the interface between a  
management and/or data host and the disk drives. The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array  
provides a Fibre Channel connection from the data host to the controller. The Sun  
StorageTek 2530 Array provides a Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) connection from the  
data host to the controller.  
The Sun StorageTek 2501 Array drive expansion tray provides additional storage.  
You can attach the drive expansion tray to either the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array or  
the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array.  
1
     
FIGURE 1-1 Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Product Overview  
Data hosts  
Ethernet out-of-band  
Host 1  
Host 2  
Redundant Fibre Channel  
FC switch  
Host 3  
FC switch  
Host 4  
Host 5  
Expansion trays  
Controller tray  
Remote  
management host  
Local  
management host  
Front-Access Components of the Trays  
Components that are accessed through the front of the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array,  
the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array, and the Sun StorageTek 2500 Array are identical in  
appearance. The disk drives in your controller tray might differ in appearance from  
those shown in FIGURE 1-2. The variation does not affect the function of the disk  
drives.  
2
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
           
The front-access components include the following:  
End caps – Plastic, removable caps on the right and left side of the tray. Numbers  
on the side of the right end cap indicate the numbering of the drives.  
LEDs (light emitting diodes) – Four LEDs located on the on the left-side end cap  
Disk drives – Twelve removable disk drives  
FIGURE 1-2 Tray Front-Access Components  
3
1. End Caps  
2. Disk Drives  
3. Tray LEDs  
1
1
2
LEDs on the Front of the Trays  
The four LEDs on the front of the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array, the Sun StorageTek  
2530 Array, and the Sun StorageTek 2501 Array are identical in appearance and  
function. The LEDs are located on the left-side endcap of the tray.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
3
         
FIGURE 1-3 Location of the LEDs on the Front of the Trays  
TABLE 1-1  
Description of the LEDs on the Front of the Trays  
Location  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
1
Locate  
White  
Indicates a failed component on Normal condition  
this tray. The locate light is  
turned on manually by CAM to  
help you find the tray that  
requires attention.  
2
3
4
Service Action  
Required (Fault)  
Amber A component within the tray  
requires attention.  
The components in the tray are  
operating normally.  
Over  
Temperature  
Amber The tray temperature has  
reached an unsafe level.  
The tray temperature is within  
operational range.  
Power  
Green  
Power is present.  
Power is not present.  
4
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
Rear-Access Components of the Trays  
Components that are accessed from the rear of the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array and  
the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array controller trays include:  
Controller Modules – Two removable controller modules.  
Power-fan assembly – Two removable power supply modules with cooling fans.  
The power-fan assembly is identical and interchangeable to the power-fan  
assemblies used for Sun StorageTek 2501 Array drive expansion tray.  
FIGURE 1-4 Controller Tray Rear-Access Components  
1
1. Controller Modules  
2. Power-Fan Assembly  
Modules  
2
Components that are accessed from the rear of the Sun StorageTek 2501 Array drive  
expansion tray are:  
I/O Modules (IOMs) – Two removable input/output modules  
Power-fan assemblies – Two removable power supply modules with cooling  
fans. The power-fan assembly is identical and interchangeable to the power-fan  
assemblies used for Sun StorageTek 2540 Array and the Sun StorageTek 2540  
Array.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
5
       
FIGURE 1-5 Drive Expansion Tray Rear-Access Components  
1
1. IOM Modules  
2. Power-Fan  
2
Assembly Modules  
Controllers  
The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array and the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array have two  
controllers. The controllers manage the input/output (I/O) between the volumes  
and the data host. The controllers have an Ethernet connection to the management  
host for out-of-band management and contain a battery that provides backup power  
to the 1 GB DIMM cache memory for up to three days in the event of a power loss.  
Because each controller tray contains two controllers, the data path through one  
controller can fail and the other controller provides a redundant data path to all of  
the disk drives. If a controller fails, you can replace the failed controller while the  
power is applied and the storage array is processing data (a hot swap). The system  
automatically updates the firmware for the new controller so that it matches the  
configuration database.  
Each controller has a media access control (MAC) address that identifies it on the  
network. The MAC address for a controller is on a label on the controller. The MAC  
address label is attached to the controller in two places: at the top of the tray and at  
the rear of the tray.  
The tray ID numbers are set by the trays themselves on first power on. However,  
you can change the setting through the Common Array Manager software. The tray  
ID numbers on both of the controllers in one controller tray are identical under  
optimal operating conditions.  
Sun StorageTek 2540 Array  
This Fibre Channel (FC) controller tray provides the following capabilities:  
6
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
                         
Two data host connectors per controller that can support either a fiber-optic  
interface or a copper interface with 1, 2, or 4 Gb/s data host connection speed  
One drive expansion tray Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) connector with 3 Gb/s drive  
expansion tray connection speed  
512-MB or 1-GB mirrored cache  
Maximum connection of 36 disk drives (one controller tray and two drive  
expansion trays)  
When fiber-optic cables are used to connect to the data host, a Small Form-factor  
Pluggable (SFP) transceiver is required to make the connection.  
FIGURE 1-6 Sun StorageTek 2540 Array Connectors  
1. Drive Expansion Tray Connector  
(SAS Out)  
2. Ethernet Management Host  
Connector  
3. Fibre Channel Data Host  
Connectors or Copper Data Host  
Connectors  
4. RS-232 Connector (Diagnostics  
Port)  
5. Not Used  
SFP Transceivers  
You can connect the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array to either copper host interface cables  
or fiber-optic host interface cables. If you use fiber-optic cables, you must install an  
SFP transceiver in each interface connector on the controller where a fiber-optic cable  
is to be installed. The SFP transceiver is required to translate the optical signals from  
the fiber-optic cable into digital signals for the controller.  
Note – The SFP transceiver shown might look different from those that are shipped  
with your controller tray. The difference does not affect transceiver performance.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
7
               
FIGURE 1-7 SFP Transceiver for the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array  
1. Data Host Connector  
2. SFP Transceiver  
3. Fiber-Optic Cable  
3
2
1
Sun StorageTek 2530 Array  
This SAS controller tray provides the following capabilities:  
Three SAS host connectors with 3 Gb/s host connection speed  
One drive expansion tray SAS connector for the drive channel with 3 Gb/s drive  
expansion tray connection speed  
512-MB or 1-GB mirrored cache  
Maximum connection of 36 disk drives (one controller tray and two drive  
expansion trays)  
8
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
             
FIGURE 1-8 Sun StorageTek 2530 Array Controller Connectors  
1. Drive Expansion Tray  
Connector (SAS Out)  
2. Ethernet Management Host  
Connector  
3. SAS Data Host Connectors  
4. RS-232 Connector  
(Diagnostics Port)  
Controller Tray and Drive Expansion Tray Power-  
Fan Assembly  
The power-fan assembly for the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array, the Sun StorageTek 2530  
Array, and the Sun StorageTek 2501 Array is identical and interchangeable.  
Note – A minimum of two disk drives must be operating in a controller tray or a  
drive expansion tray to avoid generating a power-fan assembly error.  
The power-fan assembly contains an integrated cooling fan. The power supply  
provides power to the internal components by converting incoming AC voltage to  
DC voltage. The fan circulates air inside of the tray by pulling air in through the  
vents on the front of the assembly and pushing the air out of the vents on the back  
of each fan.  
Each tray contains two power-fan assemblies. If one power supply is turned off or  
malfunctions, the other power supply maintains electrical power to the tray.  
Likewise, the fans provide redundant cooling. If one of the fans in either fan housing  
fails, the remaining fan continues to provide sufficient cooling to operate the tray.  
The remaining fan runs at a higher speed until the failed fan is replaced. Replace the  
failed fan as soon as possible.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
9
         
Sun StorageTek 2501 Array  
The drive expansion tray expands the storage capacity of a storage array. The  
controllers in the controller tray can connect to the drive expansion tray and access  
the disk drives in the drive expansion tray for additional storage. A drive expansion  
tray contains both physical components (disk drives, IOMs, and power-fan  
assemblies) and logical components (virtual disks and volumes).  
Drive Expansion Tray IOM  
The drive expansion tray contains two IOMs that provide the interface between the  
disk drives in the drive expansion tray and the controllers in the controller tray. The  
IOM also monitors sub-system parameters. Each controller in the controller tray  
connects to an IOM.  
If one IOM fails, the other IOM provides a redundant data path to the disk drives.  
You can replace a failed IOM while the power to the storage array is turned on and  
the storage array is processing data (a hot swap).  
Drive Expansion Tray IOM Connectors  
The IOM connects to the controller tray and drive expansion trays with SAS cables.  
Each IOM in a drive expansion tray has two SAS expansion connectors. One  
connector shows an up arrow, and the other connector shows a down arrow.  
FIGURE 1-9 SAS Connectors on the Drive Expansion Tray IOM  
1. SAS Connector (Up  
Arrow)  
2. SAS Connector  
(Down Arrow)  
3. Serial Connector  
When connecting the SAS cable from an IOM in one drive expansion tray to an IOM  
in another drive expansion tray, connect from a down arrow to an up arrow. If the  
cable is plugged into two connectors with arrows of the same direction,  
communication between the two drive expansion trays is lost.  
10  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
                 
LEDs on the Rear of the Trays  
Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2540  
Array  
FIGURE 1-10 Locations of the Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array  
TABLE 1-2  
Descriptions of the Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array (1 of  
2)  
Location  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
1
2
3
Link Fault  
Amber At least one link has an error.  
Green At least one link is active.  
Normal condition  
Drive Link  
At least one link has an error  
Normal condition  
Battery Fault  
Amber Indicates a fault within the  
battery backup unit.  
4
5
Cache Active  
Green Caching is enabled.  
Indicates a problem if caching is  
enabled.  
When blinking, the cache has  
data.  
Service Action Blue  
Allowed  
The controller can be removed The controller cannot be  
from the controller tray.  
removed from the controller  
tray.  
6
7
Service Action Amber Indicates a fault within the  
Normal condition  
Required (Fault)  
controller.  
Power  
Green Power is present.  
No power is applied to the  
controller tray.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
11  
           
TABLE 1-2  
Descriptions of the Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array (2 of  
2)  
Location  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
8
9
Ethernet Link  
Green The connection is active.  
The connection is not active.  
Ethernet  
100BASE-TX  
Green 100BASE-TX connection is  
active.  
The 100BASE-TX connection is  
not active.  
10 and 11 Host Link  
Green Both LEDs on indicate a 4-Gb/s Both LEDs off indicate no link  
data rate from the management to the management software  
software host.  
host.  
Left LED on and right LED off  
indicate a 1-Gb/s data rate from  
the management software host.  
Right LED on and left LED off  
indicate a 2-Gb/s data rate from  
the management software host.  
Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2530  
Array  
FIGURE 1-11 Locations of the Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array  
TABLE 1-3  
Descriptions of the Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array (1 of  
2)  
Location  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
All links have failed.  
Normal condition.  
Normal condition.  
1
2
3
Link  
Green At least one link is active.  
Amber At least one link has an error.  
Link Fault  
Battery Fault  
Amber Indicates a fault within the  
battery backup unit.  
12  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
     
TABLE 1-3  
Descriptions of the Controller LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2530 Array (2 of  
2)  
Location  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
4
Cache Active  
Green Caching is enabled.  
When blinking, the cache has  
data.  
The controller can be removed The controller cannot be  
Indicates a problem if caching is  
enabled.  
5
Service Action Blue  
Allowed  
from the controller tray.  
removed from the controller  
tray.  
6
7
Service Action Amber Indicates a fault within the  
Normal condition  
Required (Fault)  
controller.  
Power  
Green Power is present.  
No power is applied to the  
controller tray.  
8
9
Ethernet Link  
Green The connection is active.  
The connection is not active.  
Ethernet  
100BASE-TX  
Green 100BASE-TX connection is  
active.  
The 100BASE-TX connection is  
not active.  
Controller Tray and Drive Expansion Tray Power-  
Fan Assembly LEDs  
The power-fan assembly LEDs for the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array, the Sun  
StorageTek 2530 Array, and the Sun StorageTek 2501 Array are identical.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
13  
   
FIGURE 1-12 Locations of the Power-Fan Assembly LEDs  
TABLE 1-4  
Descriptions of the Power-Fan Assembly LEDs  
Location  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
1
DC Power (DC Good) Green  
DC power from the  
power-fan assembly is  
available.  
DC power from the power-  
fan assembly is not  
available.  
2
Service Action Allowed Blue  
The power-fan assembly The power-fan assembly  
can be removed from the cannot be removed from the  
tray.  
tray.  
3
4
Fault  
Amber  
Green  
A fault exists within the Normal condition  
power-fan assembly.  
Power (AC Good)  
Power is present  
Power is not present  
14  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
IOM LEDs on the Sun StorageTek 2501 Array  
FIGURE 1-13 Locations of the IOM LEDs  
TABLE 1-5  
Descriptions of the IOM LEDs  
Color On  
Location  
LED  
Off  
1
IOM Link Fault Amber  
IOM Link Green  
A link error occurred.  
The link is active.  
No errors have occurred.  
A link error occurred.  
The IOM cannot be  
2
Service Action Blue  
Allowed  
The IOM can be removed  
from the drive expansion tray. removed from the drive  
expansion tray.  
3
Service Action Amber  
Required  
(Fault)  
A fault exists within the IOM. Normal condition  
4
5
Power  
Green  
Power is present in the drive No power is applied to the  
expansion tray.  
drive expansion tray.  
Service Action LEDs  
Each controller, power-fan assembly, IOM, and disk drive has a Service Action  
Allowed LED. The Service Action Allowed LED indicates when you can remove a  
component safely. See the “LEDs on the Rear of the Trays” section on page 1-11 for  
the locations and descriptions of the Service Action Allowed LEDs on a controller  
tray and a drive expansion tray, and see “LEDs on the Disk Drives” on page 1-18 for  
disk drive Service Allowed LEDs.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
15  
       
Caution – Potential loss of data access – Never remove a power-fan assembly, a  
controller module, or a disk drive unless the Service Action Allowed LED is turned  
on or you are given specific instructions to do so by the Common Array Manager  
software Service Advisor.  
If a module fails and must be replaced, the Service Action Required LED on that  
module turns on to indicate that a service action is required. The Service Action  
Allowed LED also will turn on if it is safe to remove the module. If there are data  
availability dependencies or other conditions that dictate that a module should not  
be removed, the Service Action Allowed LED remains off.  
The Service Action Allowed LED automatically turns on or turns off as conditions  
change. In most cases, the Service Action Allowed LED turns on when the Service  
Action Required (Fault) LED is turned on for a module.  
Note – If the Service Action Required (Fault) LED is turned on but the Service  
Action Allowed LED is turned off for a particular module, you might have to service  
another component first. Check the Common Array Manager software Service  
Advisor to determine the action you should take.  
Disk Drives  
Disk drives for the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array have three components: a hard  
drive, a hard drive carrier, and an adapter card for connecting the disk drive to the  
midplane. The disk drives can be Serial Advance Technology Attachment (SATA)  
disk drives, Fibre Channel (FC) disk drives, or SAS disk drives.  
Controller trays or drive expansion trays hold up to 12 disk drives, for a maximum  
of 36 disk drives in a storage array. To reach the maximum of 36 disk drives, the  
storage array must consist of one controller tray and two drive expansion trays.  
Access to disk drives is from the front of the tray.  
Refer to the storage array release notes for supported drives.  
Note – The disk drives in your tray might differ in appearance from those shown  
here. The variation does not affect their function.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
     
FIGURE 1-14 Disk Drives  
The physical locations of the disk drives are numbered 1 through 12, from left to  
right, and from top to bottom. The right end cap has numbers on the side showing  
the numbers of the adjacent drives. The Common Array Manager Service Advisor  
software automatically detects a disk drive’s tray ID and slot designation.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
17  
     
LEDs on the Disk Drives  
FIGURE 1-15 Locations of the Disk Drive LEDs  
1
2
3
TABLE 1-6  
Descriptions of the Disk Drive LEDs  
Location  
LED  
Color  
General Behavior  
Service Action  
Allowed  
Blue  
On – The disk drive can be removed from the tray.  
1
2
Off – The disk drive cannot be removed from the  
tray.  
Fault  
Amber  
Green  
On – The disk drive has a problem.  
Off – Normal condition.  
Power  
Off – The power is turned off.  
On – The power is on and the disk drive is  
operating normally.  
3
On and blinking (0.5 s on, 0.5 s off) –Disk drive  
I/O activity is taking place.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
     
TABLE 1-7  
Disk Drive States Represented by the LEDs  
Fault  
(Amber  
LED)  
Power  
(Green LED)  
Disk Drive State  
Power is not applied.  
Off  
Off  
Off  
Normal operation, power is turned on, no disk drive I/O activity is  
occurring.  
On, solid  
Normal operation, disk drive I/O activity is occurring.  
On, blinking Off  
On, solid On, solid  
Service action required, a fault condition exists, and the disk drive is  
offline.  
Common Array Manager Software  
The Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array is managed by the Sun StorageTek Common  
Array Manager software. The Common Array Manager provides web browser–  
based management and configuration from an external management host, data host  
software that controls the data path between the data host and the array, and a  
remote command-line interface (CLI) client that provides the same control and  
monitoring capability as the web browser, and is scriptable for running frequently  
performed tasks.  
The Common Array Manager software includes Service Advisor, an online reference  
full of hardware and software configuration and troubleshooting information and  
procedures.  
For information about installing the Common Array Manager software and  
configuring and managing the array, see the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager  
Software Installation Guide.  
Service Advisor and Customer-  
Replaceable Units  
Customer-replaceable units (CRUs) are designed to be replaceable by customers.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
19  
       
To see a list of the hardware components that can be replaced at the customer site  
refer to Service Advisor in the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager software.  
The Service Advisor also provides information and procedures for replacing array  
components.  
Overview of the Installation Process  
Before you begin to install the array, you must do the following:  
Read the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes for any late-breaking  
information related to the installation of the array.  
Prepare the site as described in these books:  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Regulatory and Safety Compliance Manual  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Site Preparation Guide  
The following checklist (TABLE 1-8) outlines all of the tasks required for installing the  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Array hardware and tells you where you can find detailed  
procedures. To ensure a successful installation, perform the tasks in the order in  
which they are presented.  
TABLE 1-8  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Checklist  
Step  
Installation Task  
Where to Find Procedure  
1.  
Unpack the cabinet and move it into Unpacking guide attached to the outside of  
position.  
the shipping carton  
2.  
Install and secure the cabinet.  
and Service Manual  
3.  
4.  
Unpack the rackmounting kit and  
check its contents.  
Unpack the tray box and check its  
contents.  
“Preparing the Tray” on page 25  
5.  
6.  
7.  
Prepare the cabinet for installation.  
Attach the rails to the cabinet.  
“Preparing the Cabinet” on page 26  
“Attaching the Rails to a Cabinet” on page 27  
“Installing a Tray in a Cabinet” on page 37  
Mount the controller tray and  
expansion trays in the cabinet.  
8.  
9.  
Attach the power cables.  
“Connecting the Power Cables” on page 42  
“Intertray Cabling” on page 42  
Cable the controller tray and  
expansion trays.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
       
TABLE 1-8  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Checklist  
Step  
Installation Task  
10.  
Connect the management host.  
“Connecting the Management Host” on  
page 49  
11.  
12.  
Attach the host interface cables.  
Turn on the power.  
“Connecting Data Hosts to the 2540 Array” on  
page 51  
“Powering On the Array” on page 62  
When the tasks in TABLE 1-8 are complete, you can install the Common Array  
Manager software on an external management host, install and upgrade firmware  
from the management host, and perform initial array setup and system  
configuration. See the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager Software Installation  
Guide for complete information on software-related tasks.  
Chapter 1 Tray Overviews  
21  
22  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
CHAPTER  
2
Installing Trays  
Use the procedures in this chapter to install trays in a cabinet. The number of trays  
you need to install depends on your overall storage requirements. You can install a  
maximum of three trays, one controller tray and up to two expansion trays for each  
array.  
This chapter describes the process of installing the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array.  
It contains the following sections:  
“Preparing for the Installation” on page 24  
“Attaching the Rails to a Cabinet” on page 27  
“Installing a Tray in a Cabinet” on page 37  
“Connecting the Power Cables” on page 42  
“Intertray Cabling” on page 42  
“Drive Module Cable Labeling” on page 47  
“Next Steps” on page 48  
The installation procedures in this chapter require the following items:  
#2 Phillips screwdriver (minimum 4-inch length recommended)  
#3 Phillips screwdriver (minimum 4-inch length recommended)  
Antistatic protection  
Caution – Electrostatic discharge can damage sensitive components. Touching the  
array or its components without using a proper ground might damage the  
equipment. To avoid damage, use proper antistatic protection before handling any  
components.  
23  
   
Use the following procedures to prepare for installation:  
“Preparing the Universal Rail Kit” on page 24  
“Preparing the Tray” on page 25  
“Preparing the Cabinet” on page 26  
Preparing the Universal Rail Kit  
Use the universal rail kit to mount the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array trays in any  
of the following cabinets:  
Any standard Sun cabinet, such as the Sun Rack 900/1000 cabinet  
Any 19-inch wide, 4-post, EIA-compatible rack or cabinet with a front-to-back  
depth between vertical cabinet rails of 24-36 inches (with threaded or unthreaded  
cabinet rails).  
The Sun StorageTek Expansion cabinet  
Unpacking the Universal Rail Kit  
Unpack the universal rail kit and check the contents.  
The universal rail kit (part number 594-2489-02) comes with pre-assembled rails and  
contains the following items:  
Left rail assembly  
Right rail assembly  
10 8-32x3/8” panhead screws with lockwashers  
4 M4 flathead screws  
4 cabinet rail adapter plates (used for unthreaded cabinet rails only)  
Loosening the Rail Adjustment Screws  
To loosen the adjustment screws on the left and right rails:  
Use a flathead screwdriver to loosen the two rail adjustment screws on each rail to  
allow adjustment of each rail length (FIGURE 2-1).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
                 
FIGURE 2-1 Loosening the Rail Screws to Adjust the Rail Length  
Note – The rails are preconfigured to adjust to cabinet rail depths of between 24  
inches (609.6 mm) and 34 inches (863.6 mm).  
Preparing the Tray  
Caution – Two people are needed to lift and move the tray. Use care to avoid injury.  
A traycan weigh up to 54.3 pounds (24.6 kg).  
1. Unpack the tray.  
2. Check the contents of the box for the following items:  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Arraytrays (controller or expansion)  
Ship kit for the controller tray  
One pair left and right end caps (plastic bezels)  
Four 4 Gbps FC SFPs (2 per FC Controller module)  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
25  
           
Two 6-meter RJ45 -RJ45 Ethernet cables (one per controller module)  
One RJ45-DIN9 cable  
One RJ45-DB9 adapter  
Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager Software CD  
Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager Software Installation Guide (on the  
software CD)  
Common Array Manager sscs CLI Quick Reference Card  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide (Hardcopy)  
Accessing Documentation guide  
Premium feature license cards (ordered optionally)  
Ship kit for each expansion tray  
Two 1-meter copper SAS cables (one per I/O module)  
Accessing Documentation guide  
AC power cords are shipped separately with each tray.  
Preparing the Cabinet  
Select the cabinet in which you will be installing the array. Be sure the cabinet is  
installed as described in the installation instructions provided with it.  
1. Stabilize the cabinet as described in the cabinet documentation.  
2. If the cabinet has casters, make sure the casters are locked to prevent the  
cabinet from rolling.  
3. Remove or open the front panel.  
4. Remove or open the vented back panel.  
Planning the Order of the Tray Installation  
Install the trays starting with the controller tray at the lowest available 2RU tray slot  
in the cabinet. Next, install the expansion trays for the first controller tray. If room  
remains in the cabinet, repeat for the next controller and expansion trays.  
Starting at the bottom distributes the weight correctly in the cabinet.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
           
Depending on the type of cabinetin which you will install the tray, use one of the  
following procedures to attach the rails:  
“Attaching the Universal Rail Kit to a Standard Sun or 19-Inch Cabinet With  
Threaded Cabinet Rails” on page 27  
“Attaching the Universal Rail Kit to a Standard 19-Inch Cabinet With Unthreaded  
Cabinet Rails” on page 31  
Each tray requires two standard mounting rack units (2RU) of vertical space in the  
cabinet. Each standard mounting rack unit (RU) has three mounting holes in the left  
and right cabinet rails. The top mounting hole of the lower RU is always closest to  
the bottom mounting hole of the upper RU, hence the divsion between RUs on a  
cabinet rail is between the two closeest mounting holes in a grouping.  
The universal rails have an adjustable depth of 24” to 34”.  
Attaching the Universal Rail Kit to a Standard  
Sun or 19-Inch Cabinet With Threaded Cabinet  
Rails  
This procedure describes the steps to attach the universal rail kit to:  
All standard Sun cabinets, including the Sun Rack 900/1000 cabinets  
Sun StorageTek Expansion cabinets  
All 19-inch wide, 4-post EIA-compatible racks and cabinets with the following  
cabinet rail types:  
M5 threaded  
M6 threaded  
12-24 threaded  
circular unthreaded  
1. To attach the universal rail kit to a cabinet withthese cabinet rail typesPosition  
the front flange of the left universal rail behind the left front cabinet rail  
(FIGURE 2-2).  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
27  
         
Note – The RUs are not labeled on all racks, as they are on the Sun cabinets. The  
rule of thumb to remember is that the division of RUs passes between the two  
closest rail holes in each set of holes (see FIGURE 2-2).  
FIGURE 2-2 Positioning the Front of the Left Rail Behind the Left Front Cabinet Rail  
2. Insert the 8-32 screws through the center holes in each RU of the rack into the  
top and bottom holes in the Universal rail (FIGURE 2-3).  
These screws pass through the cabinet rail holes and screw into threaded holes in  
the Universal rail.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
FIGURE 2-3 Securing the Left Rail to the Front of the Cabinet  
3. Repeat Step 1 and Step 2 for the right rail.  
4. At the back of the cabinet, adjust the length of the left rail as needed to fit the  
cabinet, and position the rail flange behind the face of the cabinet rail  
(FIGURE 2-4).  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
29  
   
FIGURE 2-4 Adjusting the Length of the Left Rail at the Back of the Cabinet  
5. Align the rail flange so that the top and bottom mounting holes match the  
center holes in the RUs corresponding to those used on the front of the cabinet.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
6. Insert the 8-32 screws through the center holes of the rack into the top and  
bottom mounting holes on the universal rail (FIGURE 2-5).  
FIGURE 2-5 Securing the Left Rail to the Back of the Cabinet  
7. Repeat Step 4, Step 5, and Step 6 for the right rail.  
Attaching the Universal Rail Kit to a Standard  
19-Inch Cabinet With Unthreaded Cabinet Rails  
This procedure describes the steps to attach the universal rail kit to:  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
31  
       
All 19-inch wide, 4-post EIA-compatible racks and cabinets with unthreaded  
cabinet rails (square hole racks).  
To attach the universal rail kit to a cabinet with unthreaded cabinet rails, follow  
these steps first for the left rail and then for the right rail:  
1. Hook a cabinet rail adapter plate over the front of the cabinet rail. (FIGURE 2-6)  
FIGURE 2-6 Inserting the Cabinet Rail Adapter Plate on the Cabinet Rail  
Position the adapter plate over of the 2RU slot in which the tray is to be  
mounted. The hook on the top of the adapter plate hooks into the top hole of the  
upper RU. The flat flange on the bottom of the adapter plate fits into the bottom  
hole of the lower RU (FIGURE 2-7).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
FIGURE 2-7 Adapter plate in place on the Cabinet Rail.  
2. Slide the front flange of the universal rail between the front cabinet rail and  
the top hook of the rail adater plate (FIGURE 2-8).  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
33  
 
FIGURE 2-8 Slide the flange of the rail behind the cabinet rail and between that and the  
hook of the rail adapter plat.e, as shown.  
3. Insert and tighten two 8-32 screws through the top and bottom holes in the  
adapter plate, through the cabinet rail, and into the top and bottom threaded  
holes in the universal rail mounting flange (FIGURE 2-9).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
FIGURE 2-9 Securing the Rail to the Front left of the Cabinet  
4. Repeat Step 1 through Step 3 on the corresponding cabinet rail at the back of  
the cabinet (FIGURE 2-10).  
Mounting the rail on the back of the cabinet is the same as mounting it to the  
front, after you extend the rail the necessary length to reach the rear cabinet rail.  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
35  
 
FIGURE 2-10 Adjusting the Length of the Rail at the Back of the Cabinet  
5. Insert and tighten two 8-32 screws through the top and bottom holes in the  
adpater plate, back cabinet rail, and universal rail mounting flange  
(FIGURE 2-11).  
The screws passes through the unthreaded holes of the adapter plate and cabinet  
rail mounting rail and screw into the threaded holes of the rail mounting flange.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
FIGURE 2-11 Securing the Rail to the Back of the Cabinet  
For extra stability, you can tighten the rail screws as in FIGURE 2-1.  
6. Repeat Step 1 through Step 5 to install the right rail.  
Installing a Tray in a Cabinet  
Install the controller tray in the first empty 2RU slot at the bottom of the cabinet. If  
you are installing expansion trays, continue installing the trays from the bottom up.  
1. Using two people, one at each side of the tray, carefully lift and rest the tray on  
the bottom ledge of the left and right rails (FIGURE 2-12).  
Caution – Use care to avoid injury. A tray can weigh up to 55 pounds (25 kg).  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
37  
       
FIGURE 2-12 Positioning the Tray in the Cabinet  
2. Carefully slide the tray into the cabinet until the front mounting flanges on the  
tray touch the vertical face of the cabinet (FIGURE 2-13).  
38  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
 
FIGURE 2-13 Array Controller Tray Installed  
The tray has mounting flanges on both sides with three mounting holes in them. The  
top and bottom holes are large enough to fit over the heads of the screws already in  
the cabinet rails used to mount the universal rails. If the tray was shipped with end  
caps (bezels) clipped on the tray mounting flanges, remove them before sliding the  
tray all the way in over the mounting screw heads.  
To remove an end cap , place your thumb on the lower front face of the cap and  
reach your forefinger underneath to the back bottom edge of the cap, then pull  
the cap towards you and slightly upwards.  
On the rear of the array tray, a flat metal tab on each side corner slides into a special  
mounting clip on the rear of each universal rail, securing the back of the array tray.  
This makes the use of rear mounting screws to secure the tray in the rail  
unnecessary, especially in locations where the rack and trays are not likely to be  
moved. For racks that will be moved or shipped, Sun recommends that you install  
M4 screws through the hole in the tab and into the corresponding threaded hole in  
the rail as shown in FIGURE 2-14.  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
39  
   
FIGURE 2-14 Rail clip and rear mounting hole on rear of array tray.  
3. Insert a single 8-32 pan head screw through the center hole in each front  
mounting flange and tighten (FIGURE 2-15).  
40  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
 
FIGURE 2-15 Securing the Tray to the Front of a Sun Rack 900/1000 Cabinet  
4. Replace the end caps (bezels) that cover the mounting flanges on the front of  
the array tray.  
On each front mounting flange, there is a small tab over which the end caps fit.  
The end caps have a slot on top for this tab.  
a. Place the end cap over the tab so the tab can go into the slot.  
b. Snap the bottom of the end cap into place.  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
41  
   
Connecting the Power Cables  
1. Verify that both power switches are turned off.  
2. Verify that the circuit breakers in the cabinet are turned off.  
3. Connect each power supply in the tray to a separate power source in the  
cabinet.  
4. Connect the primary power cables from the cabinet to the external power  
source.  
Note – Do not power on the array until you complete the procedures in this chapter.  
The power-on sequence is described in detail in Chapter 4.  
Intertray Cabling  
This section describes how to cable a controller tray to expansion trays for several  
different configurations. Each controller has one expansion port (FIGURE 2-16).  
Controller A controls drive channel 1 through the A-side drive modules; Controller  
B controls drive channel 2 through the B-side modules. Each drive channel provides  
a separate path for data transfer from the controller tray to the expansion trays; the  
two channels provide redundancy.  
FIGURE 2-16 Expansion Ports on the Controller Tray  
SAS Expansion Ports to the Expansion Tray  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
1
1
DRIVE EXPANSION  
DRIVE EXPANSION  
HOST  
HOST  
S
A
S
S
A
S
S
A
S
S
A
S
2
3
2
3
S
A
S
S
A
S
HOST  
HOST  
Each expansion tray has two SAS port connectors, one marked with an up arrow  
and the other marked with a down arrow (FIGURE 2-17). You use SAS cables to  
connect expansion trays to controllers.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
             
Note – Perform all SAS connections from an Out (down arrow) port to an In (up  
arrow) port. If the cable is connected to two connectors with the same arrows,  
communication between the two drive modules will be lost.  
FIGURE 2-17 Expansion Ports on an Expansion Tray  
2
2
1
1
1. SAS Expansion In Port  
2.SAS Expansion Out Port  
Array Configuration Naming Convention  
The configuration naming convention is “controllers x trays” where the first number  
is the controller tray and the second is the sum of the controller tray and the number  
of expansion trays. For example, 1x1 is a standalone controller tray, 1x2 is the  
controller tray and one expansion tray, 1x is the controller tray and 2expansion trays  
(TABLE 2-1).  
TABLE 2-1  
Controller and Expansion Tray Configurations  
Configuration  
Identifier  
Number of Expansion  
Trays  
Controller Tray  
1x1  
1x2  
1x3  
1
1
1
0
1
2
Note – Do not add more expansion trays than the array supports.  
Use the following instructions to connect the dual-RAID controller tray to one or  
more expansion trays.  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
43  
       
Connecting Expansion Trays  
Keep the following points in mind when adding expansion trays to your storage  
array:  
Expansion trays must be added with power to the array and I/O data transfer  
turned off. If you need to add an expansion tray to an array that cannot be taken  
off-line, contact your Sun Technical Support representative before attempting to  
connect the new tray.  
Controller and expansion trays are shipped with protective plastic plugs in the  
SAS expansion ports. You must remove these before connecting cables.  
Expansion trays are added serially, in a chain (actually two chains: channel one  
through the A-side controller and modules, and channel two through the B-side  
controller and modules). The SAS cable from the expansion port on a controller  
connects to the In port (Up arrow) on an expansion tray drive module. The SAS  
cable from a drive module on expansion tray 1 to a corresponding drive module  
on expansion tray 2 connects from the Out port on expansion tray 1 to the  
corresponding In port on expansion tray 2. This pattern repeats for each  
additional drive module on a channel. See FIGURE 2-19 for an illustration of this  
reverse cabling pattern.  
To connect cables for maximum redundancy, controller B must be cabled to the  
expansion tray B-side modules in the opposite order as the expansion tray A-side  
modules. That means the last drive module in the A-side chain from controller A  
must be the first drive module in the B-side chain from controller B. See  
FIGURE 2-19 for an illustration of cabling for maximum tray level redundancy.  
On all SAS cables, affix a label to each end of the cable. See “Drive Module Cable  
Labeling” on page 47 for labeling tips.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
 
Cabling an Expansion Tray to a Controller Tray  
A Controller tray has two expansion ports, one on the Controller A module and one  
on the Controller B module. To connect an expansion tray, connect an SAS cable  
from each expansion port on the controller to each In port on the expansion tray.  
FIGURE 2-18 shows a 1x2 array configuration consisting of one controller tray and one  
expansion tray. Two SAS cables are required.  
FIGURE 2-18 1x2 Array Configuration Cabling Example  
To cable a 1x2 array configuration:  
Expansion Tray  
Controller Tray  
B
A
1. Locate the Controller A and Controller B expansion ports at the back of the  
controller tray (FIGURE 2-16).  
2. Locate the In and Out expansion ports at the A-side and B-side back of the  
expansion tray (FIGURE 2-17).  
3. Connect one SAS cable between the Controller A expansion port and the A-  
side In port on the expansion tray (FIGURE 2-18).  
4. Connect one SAS cable between the Controller B expansion port and the B-  
side In port on the expansion tray (FIGURE 2-18).  
Cabling an Expansion Tray to Another Expansion  
Tray  
Each additional expansion tray is added to the preceding expansion tray by  
connecting SAS cables from the Out ports of the first tray to the In ports of the next  
tray. FIGURE 2-19 illustrates a 1x3 array configuration consisting of one controller tray  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
45  
         
and two expansion trays. The cable connections on the B-side are reversed (the cable  
from the controller A expansion port goes to the In port of expansion tray 1; the  
cable from the controller B expansion port goes to the In port on expansion tray 2)  
for maximum redundancy. This pattern continues for each additional tray you add.  
Two more SAS cables are required for each additional tray.  
FIGURE 2-19 1x3 Array Configuration Cabling  
To cable a 1x3 array configuration for maximum redundancy:  
Expansion Tray 2  
Expansion Tray 1  
Controller Tray  
A
B
1. Locate the Controller A and Controller B expansion ports at the back of the  
controller tray (FIGURE 2-16).  
2. Locate In and Out expansion ports at the A-side and B-side back of the  
expansion tray (FIGURE 2-17).  
3. Connect one SAS cable between the Controller A expansion port and the A-  
side expansion In port of expansion tray 1 (FIGURE 2-19).  
4. Connect one SAS cable between the Controller B expansion Out port and the  
B-side expansion In port of expansion tray 2 (FIGURE 2-19).  
5. Connect one SAS cable between the expansion tray 1 Out port and the A-side  
expansion In port of expansion tray 2 (FIGURE 2-19).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
 
6. Connect one SAS cable between the expansion tray 2 B-side Out port and the  
B-side In port of expansion tray 2 (FIGURE 2-19).  
Drive Module Cable Labeling  
Labels for the drive cables identify which controller ports and which expansion  
connections in an expansion tray you use when you attach cables between a  
controller and the drive modules on an expansion tray. Cable labels are useful if you  
need to disconnect cables to service a controller. Attach a label to each end of the  
cable. Use this design to create labels for drive cables:  
Controller ID (for example, Controller A)  
Expansion tray ID (for example, Tray A)  
Expansion port ID (for example, In or Out)  
Drive module ID  
Example Label Abbreviation  
In this example, the storage configuration has the following characteristics:  
Drive channel 1  
Controller A, drive channel 1  
Drive module 1  
Expansion Tray A (which is the left drive module), Out port  
Using this design, the label includes the following information:  
CtA-Dch1, Dm1-Tray_A (left), Out  
Simplex Configurations  
A simplex configuration is a 2530 Array with a single controller and a single  
backend channel. By definition, there is a single path SAS connection to the data  
host, and no redundancy is available. There can be expansion modules on the single  
backend channel.  
Chapter 2 Installing Trays  
47  
       
Simplex cabling is the same as the cabling on a single channel of an ordinary array,  
such as that shown on the A-side in FIGURE 2-18. CRU removal and replacement  
procedures in a simplex configuration are the same as those for a duplex  
configuration with a failed controller (with the exception of the service procedures  
targeted at the failed controller). These procedures are available in Service Advisor.  
Maintenance procedures such as firmware updates or servicing of the controller or  
expansion modules will cause loss of access to the array during the performing of  
the procedure, since there is no backup channel.  
Performance and default behavior are the same as a duplex configuration with a  
failed or missing controller. Write cache is by nature in write-through mode because  
there is no cache mirroring possible.  
Next Steps  
Now you are ready to connect the management and data hosts, as described in  
Chapter 3.  
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CHAPTER  
3
Connecting the Management Host  
This chapter describes Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array cable connections for hosts.  
It contains the following sections:  
“Connecting the Management Host” on page 49  
“Connecting Data Hosts to the 2540 Array” on page 51  
“Connecting Data Hosts to the 2530 Array” on page 56  
“Host Cable Labeling” on page 59  
“Next Steps” on page 59  
Connecting the Management Host  
The management host directly manages Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Arrays over an  
out-of-band network. This section describes how to setup a connection between the  
Ethernet port of a controller (FIGURE 3-1) and the management host.  
49  
         
FIGURE 3-1 Ethernet Ports for Controller A and Controller B  
Controller A  
Ethernet port  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
1
1
DRIVE EXPANSION  
DRIVE EXPANSION  
HOST  
HOST  
S
A
S
S
A
S
S
A
S
S
A
S
2
3
2
3
S
A
S
S
A
S
HOST  
HOST  
Ethernet port  
Controller B  
Note – Before you begin, ensure that the tworequired Ethernet cables are available.  
Guide.  
“Attaching the Ethernet Ports to the LAN of the Management Host” on page 50  
“Attaching the Ethernet Ports to the Management Host Using an Ethernet Hub”  
on page 51  
“Attaching the Ethernet Ports Directly to the Management Host With a Cross-  
Over Cable” on page 51  
Attaching the Ethernet Ports to the LAN of the  
Management Host  
To attach the Ethernet ports to the local area network (LAN) of the management host:  
1. Locate the Ethernet port for Controller A and Controller B at the back of the  
controller tray (FIGURE 3-1).  
2. Connect Ethernet cables to the Ethernet ports of each controller.  
3. Connect the other end of each Ethernet cable to the LAN on which your  
management host resides (preferably on the same subnet).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
     
Attaching the Ethernet Ports to the Management  
Host Using an Ethernet Hub  
To attach the Ethernet ports and the management port Ethernet interface to an  
Ethernet hub on a private subnet:  
1. Locate Ethernet ports on Controller A and Controller B at the back of the  
controller tray (FIGURE 3-1).  
2. Connect Ethernet cables to the Ethernet ports of each controller module.  
3. Connect the other end of each Ethernet cable to an Ethernet hub.  
4. Connect an Ethernet port on the management host to the Ethernet hub.  
Attaching the Ethernet Ports Directly to the  
Management Host With a Cross-Over Cable  
Note – This method would typically be used only to establish temporary IP  
connectivity between the management host and the controller’s Ethernet ports.  
To attach the Ethernet ports directly to the management host using cross-over cables:  
1. Locate the Ethernet ports for Controller A and Controller B at the back of the  
controller tray (FIGURE 3-1).  
2. Obtain and connect Ethernet cross-over cables to the Ethernet port of each  
controller module.  
3. Connect the other end of each Ethernet cable directly to your management host  
Ethernet ports.  
Connecting Data Hosts to the 2540 Array  
The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array connects to data hosts through Fibre Channel (FC)  
cables.  
Chapter 3 Connecting the Management Host and Data Hosts  
51  
           
Note – For maximum hardware redundancy, you must install a minimum of two  
HBAs in each host. Dual-port HBAs give you two paths into the storage array but do  
not ensure redundancy if the HBA fails.  
2540 Array Data Host Connection Topologies  
You can connect data hosts to access the Sun StorageTek 2540 Array directly to the  
array, or through Fibre Channel (FC) switches to the array. The following figures  
illustrate four possible host connection topologies for the 2540 Array:  
Direct connection from a single data host server (FIGURE 3-2)  
Direct connection from two data host servers (FIGURE 3-3)  
Data host connection through Fiber Channel switch fabric (FIGURE 3-4)  
Mixed connection, direct and through switch (FIGURE 3-5)  
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FIGURE 3-2 Direct connection from a single data host server  
FIGURE 3-3 Direct Connection from two data host servers  
1. Host  
2. HBA 1  
3. HBA 2  
4. Host Port 1  
5. Host Port 2  
6. Controller A  
7. Controller B  
FIGURE 3-4 Data host connection through a Fibre Channel switch  
Chapter 3 Connecting the Management Host and Data Hosts  
53  
     
1. Host  
2. HBA 1  
3. HBA 2  
4. Host Port 1  
5. Host Port 2  
6. Controller A  
7. Controller B  
FIGURE 3-5 Mixed topology of data hosts connected directly and through FC switches  
1. Host 1  
2. HBA 1  
3. HBA 2  
4. Host 2  
5. Host 3  
6. Host Port 1  
7. Host Port 2  
8. Controller A  
9. Controller B  
2540 Array Data Host Connections  
Data transmission from the host to the array controller modules is through fiber-  
optic cables. The fiber-optic cables connect to the controllers through Small Form-  
factor Pluggable (SFP) transceivers (FIGURE 3-6).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
FIGURE 3-6 Connecting the SFP and Fiber-optic Cable to a 2540 Controller  
3
2
1
1. Fibre Channel Host Port  
2. SFP is Inserted  
into the Host Port  
3. Fiber-optic Cable is  
inserted  
into the SFP  
The Sun StorageTek 2540 Array controller tray has fourFC host connector ports, two  
per controller module. To maintain redundancy, connect two data paths from each  
host, one to each controller.  
FIGURE 3-7 FC host connectors on the 2540 controller.  
1. not used  
2. Fibre Channel data  
host port 1  
2
2
1
3
3
1
3. Fibre Channel data  
host port 2  
To Connect Data Hosts Using Fibre Channel  
1. Locate the host ports at the back of the controller tray (FIGURE 3-7).  
If the host port has a plastic protection plug, remove it.  
2. Plug one SFP transceiver into a host port.  
Chapter 3 Connecting the Management Host and Data Hosts  
55  
     
3. Plug one end of the fiber-optic cable into the SFP transceiver.  
4. Plug the other end of the fiber-optic cable into one of the HBAs in the  
host (direct topology) or into a switch (fabric topology).  
5. Affix a label to each end of the cable. See “Host Cable Labeling” on  
page 59 for labeling tips.  
6. Repeat these steps for each host-to-controller connection.  
Connecting Data Hosts to the 2530 Array  
Data transmission from the host to the controllers in the array module is through  
Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) cables. All connections from the host to the controllers  
are direct connections (with no intermediate switches). FIGURE 3-8 shows an  
example of a direct host connection from a single data host with dual HBAs.  
FIGURE 3-8 Direct Connection From a Single Host With Dual HBAs  
1. Host  
2. HBA 1  
3. HBA 2  
4. Host Connectors on the  
Controllers  
5. Controller A  
6. Controller B  
FIGURE 3-9 shows an example of direct host connections from two data hosts, each  
with dual HBAs.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
   
FIGURE 3-9 Direct connections from two data hosts with dual HBAs.  
FIGURE 3-10 shows an example of direct host connections from three data hosts, each  
with dual HBAs.  
FIGURE 3-10 Direct connections from three data hosts with dual HBAs.  
Note – For maximum hardware redundancy, you must install a minimum of two  
HBAs in each host. Dual-port HBAs give you two paths into the storage array but do  
not ensure redundancy if the HBA fails.  
Chapter 3 Connecting the Management Host and Data Hosts  
57  
   
Before you connect data hosts directly to the array, check that the following  
prerequisites have been met:  
Interface cables are connected and between the HBAs and the array controllers.  
SAS cables (1-, 3-, or 6-meters) are available to connect the array host ports to the  
data host HBAs.  
Each controller module on a controller tray has three SAS host ports (FIGURE 3-11).  
FIGURE 3-11 SAS Data Host Ports (on back of tray).  
2
1
2
1
3
3
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
Link  
1
1
DRIVE EXPANSION  
DRIVE EXPANSION  
HOST  
HOST  
S
A
S
S
A
S
S
A
S
S
A
S
2
3
2
3
S
A
S
S
A
S
HOST  
HOST  
1. SAS Host Port 1  
2. SAS Host Port 2  
Controller B  
Controller A  
To Connect Data Hosts to a 2530 Array  
1. Locate the host ports at the back of the controller tray (FIGURE 3-11).  
If the host port has a plastic protection plug, remove it.  
2. Connect one end of the SAS cable to a host port on a controller module.  
Host ports are numbered from left to right: host port 1, host port 2, and host  
port 3.  
3. Connect the other end of each SAS cable to a data host HBA.  
4. Affix a label to each end of the cable. See “Host Cable Labeling” on page 59 for  
information about cable labels.  
5. Repeat these steps for each host-to-controller connection.  
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Host Cable Labeling  
Labels for host cabling identify which host HBA ports and which controller ports  
you use when you attach cables between the host and the controller. Cable labels are  
useful if you need to disconnect cables to service a controller. Attach a label to each  
end of the cable. Use this design to create labels for host cables:  
Host name and HBA port  
Controller ID (for example, Controller A)  
Host channel ID (for example, Host channel 1)  
Example Label Abbreviation  
In this example, the storage configuration has the following characteristics:  
Host name is “Engineering”  
Host HBA 1, port 1  
Controller A, channel 1  
Using this design, the label includes the following information:  
Heng-HBA1/P1, CtA-Hch1  
Next Steps  
After you connected the management and data hosts, you can power on the trays, as  
described in Chapter 4.  
Chapter 3 Connecting the Management Host and Data Hosts  
59  
     
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CHAPTER  
4
This chapter describes initial tray power-on procedures. Perform the following  
procedures in the order listed:  
“Before Powering On” on page 61  
“Powering On the Array” on page 62  
“Powering Off the Array” on page 63  
“Next Steps” on page 64  
Before Powering On  
You can set up a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server to issue the IP  
defaults to internal static IP addresses. (See the Sun StorageTek Common Array  
Manager Software Installation Guide for information about configuring IP addresses on  
array controllers.)  
For instructions on configuring IP addresses on the array controllers, see  
“Configuring the IP Address of the Array Controllers” on page 74. For instructions  
on how to set up the DHCP server, see “Configuring a DHCP Server” on page 81.  
61  
       
Powering On the Array  
Use this procedure to turn power on for all trays installed in the cabinet (FIGURE 4-1).  
Note – The order in which you power up the trays is important. Be sure to power  
on the controller tray last in order to ensure that the disks in the expansion trays  
have enough time to spin completely before being scanned by the redundant array  
of independent disks (RAID) controllers in the controller tray.  
FIGURE 4-1 Tray Power Connectors and Switches  
Controller B  
Controller A  
2
1
1. Controller A power switch  
2. Controller B power switch  
1. Prepare the power cables as specified in “Connecting the Power Cables” on  
page 42.  
2. Turn on the cabinet circuit breakers, if applicable.  
3. Press the power switches at the back of each expansion tray to the On position.  
While the tray powers on, the green and amber LEDs on the front and back of the  
controller tray turn on and off intermittently. Depending on your configuration, it  
can take several minutes for the tray to power on. When the power-on sequence  
is complete, the LEDs are steady green.  
Wait until all the disk drive indicator lights on the expansion trays are steady  
green before proceding to the next step.  
4. Press each power switch at the back of the controller tray to the On position.  
5. Check the status of each tray.  
After the power-on sequence is complete, confirm the following:  
The green OK/Power LEDs on each drive in the tray are steady on.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
       
The green OK/Power LED on the tray is steady on.  
If all tray and drive Ok/Power LEDs are steady green and the amber Service  
Required LEDs are off, the power-on sequence is complete and no faults have  
been detected.  
Powering Off the Array  
The array rarely needs to be powered off. You remove power only when you plan to  
physically move the array to another location or are adding additional trays to a  
controller.  
To power off the array, do the following:  
1. Stop all I/O from the hosts, if connected, to the storage system.  
2. Wait approximately 2 minutes until all disk drive LEDs have stopped flashing.  
Note – If Disk Scrubbing is enabled, the disk drive LEDs will continue to flash after  
the 2-minute period has elapsed. By waiting the 2-minute period, you ensure that  
the data residing in cache has been written to disk. The LED flash rate during disk  
scrubbing (slow, periodic blink) is different from the flash rate of I/O (fast, random).  
After the 2-minute period, data residing in cache is written to disk and the  
battery mechanisms are disengaged.  
3. Check the Cache Active LED on the controller (FIGURE 1-10) to determine if any  
outstanding cache needs to be written.  
If the LED is on, there is still data that needs to be flushed and written to disk.  
4. Ensure that the Cache Active LED is no longer flashing before powering off the  
array.  
5. Press each power switch at the back of the controller tray to the Off position.  
6. Press the power switches at the back of each expansion tray to the Off position.  
Chapter 4 Powering On the Array  
63  
   
After you have connected the management host and data hosts, you are ready to  
install the management host software as described in the Sun StorageTek Common  
Array Manager Software Installation Guide and the data host software as described in  
Chapter 5.  
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CHAPTER  
5
Data Hosts, HBAs, and Other  
This chapter describes how to install data host software, HBAs, and other software  
“Setting Up a Data Host On a Solaris System” on page 66  
“Installing Data Host Software for Operating Systems Other Than Solaris” on  
page 69  
“Enabling Multipathing Software” on page 70  
“Next Steps” on page 71  
Data Host Software  
The data host software contains tools that manage the data path I/O connections  
between the data host and the array. This includes drivers and utilities that enable  
array management hosts to connect to, monitor, and transfer data in a storage area  
network (SAN).  
Note – Some management hosts can also be used as data hosts.  
HBAs and Drivers  
A Host Bus Adapter (HBA) is a network interface card that manages all data I/O on  
your data host. The specific HBAs you need depend on the data host server  
platform, operating system, data transport (SAS or FC), and data transfer rates used  
65  
       
in your storage area network. HBAs must be ordered separately, from Sun or their  
respective manufacturers. Sun HBAs can be ordered from:  
/www.sun.com/storagetek/storage_networking/hba/  
The required versions of HBAdrivers must be installed on the data host before you  
can set up a data host. The Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes lists the  
data host requirements for HBAs and drivers. Refer to the specific vendor HBA  
documentation for instructions on installing HBA drivers.  
Multipathing  
Data host software controls the data path between the data host and the array. Since  
there can be more than one path between the host and the array for redundancy, this  
function is called multipathing.  
You must install data host software (including multipathing) on each data host that  
communicates with the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array. The multipathing  
software you need depends on the host platform, HBA, and the data transport (SAS  
or FC) in your storage area network. This information is listed in the latest version of  
the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes.  
Setting Up a Data Host On a Solaris  
System  
The Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array provides data path support for data hosts  
running Solaris, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003, Red Hat Linux, HP-UX,  
NetWare, and IBM AIX operating systems. This section applies to hosts running  
See the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes for the latest supported  
operating system versions.  
Note – To install data host software on systems that are not running the Solaris OS, see  
“Installing Data Host Software for Operating Systems Other Than Solaris” on  
page 69.  
You must install data host software (including multipathing) on each data host that  
communicates with the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array. Multipathing is included  
in the Solaris 10 OS. For Solaris OS 8 and 9 data hosts, you need the SAN  
Foundation Kit software (which includes the multipathing software).  
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To install data host software on Solaris OSs, see the following sections:  
“To Obtain Sun Solaris 8 and 9 Data Host Software” on page 67  
“To Install the SAN 4.4 Data Host Software” on page 67  
To Obtain Sun Solaris 8 and 9 Data Host  
Software  
Obtain Sun Solaris OS 8 and 9 data host software as follows:  
1. Go to the Sun Microsystems web page (sun.com).  
The Sun home page is displayed.  
2. Select Downloads from the home page navigation bar.  
The Downloads page is displayed (it is not labeled).  
3. On the View by Category tab, select System Administration>Storage  
Management.  
The Storage Management page is displayed, showing a list of downloadable  
storage-related products.  
4. Select the SAN 4.4 product.  
The login page is displayed.  
5. Login using your Sun account ID.  
The SAN 4.4.x Download page is displayed.  
6. Accept the License Agreement and select the SAN 4.4 version required for your  
operating system.  
The data host software version you need depends on your operating system. See  
the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes for the current data host  
software requirements. Download the Solaris x (8 or 9) Base Package (if you do  
not already have it installed), and then the Install_it Script SAN 4.4.x version as  
recommended in the release notes.  
There is a README file available on the SAN 4.4.x Download page with  
instructions for unpacking and installing the download file on your data host  
computer.  
To Install the SAN 4.4 Data Host Software  
To launch the host software installer:  
Chapter 5 Data Hosts, HBAs, and Other Software  
67  
     
1. Log in to the host as root.  
2. Change to the SAN_4.4.xx_install_it directory in which the compressed  
installation file was unpacked:  
cd<user-specified location>/SAN_4.4.xx_install_it  
software installer by typing the following command:  
./install_it  
When the installation is complete, the root prompt returns.  
4. Enable the Sun StorageTek Traffic Manager multipathing software (see  
“Enabling Multipathing Software” on page 70).  
To Obtain Traffic Manager for Operating  
Systems Other Than Solaris  
1. Go to the Sun Microsystems web page (sun.com).  
The Sun home page is displayed.  
2. Select Downloads from the home page navigation bar.  
The Downloads page is displayed (it is not labeled).  
3. On the View by Category tab, select System Administration>Storage  
Management.  
The Storage Management page is displayed, showing a list of downloadable  
storage-related products.  
4. Scroll down and select the Traffic Manager version for the operating system  
you have.  
The login page is displayed.  
5. Login using your Sun account ID.  
The Traffic Manager product Download page is displayed.  
6. Accept the License Agreement and select the Traffic Manager version required  
for your operating system.  
The data host software version you need depends on your operating system. See  
the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes for the current data host  
software requirements.  
There is a README file available on the download page with instructions for  
unpacking and installing the download file on your data host computer.  
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To install data host software for operating systems other than Solaris, see the  
following sections:  
“About Data Host Software For Non-Solaris Platforms” on page 69  
“Downloading and Installing Sun RDAC Software” on page 69  
Note – To dowload software from the Sun Download Center, you must register as a  
Sun customer. The first time you click Download to download a software product,  
click the Register Now link on the Login page, complete the required fields, and  
click Register.  
About Data Host Software For Non-Solaris  
Platforms  
The data host software for Red Hat Linux, HP-UX, AIX, and Windows platforms is  
Sun Redundant Dual Array Controller (RDAC), also known as MPP, and is available  
from the Sun Download Center (SDLC).  
See the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Release Notes for a list of supported operating  
systems, patches, and HBAs.  
Downloading and Installing Sun RDAC Software  
1. To download the latest version of Sun RDAC software (support for Windows  
and Linux multipathing), go to:  
and select Hardware Drivers>Storage.  
2. Select the link for the RDAC driver for the Operating System you have.  
An RDAC Driver download page is displayed.  
3. Click Download.  
4. Log in using your SDLC user name and password.  
5. Read and accept the license agreement.  
Chapter 5 Data Hosts, HBAs, and Other Software  
69  
           
6. Select the link for the data host platform that you want to install.  
7. Save the install package to a temporary directory.  
8. Uncompress and untar the install package.  
9. When the download is finished, log out of the SDLC.  
A readmefile is provided as part of the installation package. To install the software,  
refer to the readmefile for platform-specific instructions.  
Enabling Multipathing Software  
Manager multipathing software.  
The procedure you use to enable multipathing software depends on the version of  
Solaris OS running on the host:  
“Enabling Multipathing Software for Solaris 8 or 9 OS” on page 70  
“Enabling Multipathing Software for Solaris 10 OS” on page 71  
Enabling Multipathing Software for Solaris 8 or  
9 OS  
To enable the multipathing software on hosts running Solaris OS 8 or 9:  
1. Open the /kernel/drv/scsi_vhci.conffile with a text editor.  
2. Set mpxio-disable=”no”; in the file.  
3. Set load-balance=”round-robin”; in the file.  
4. Set auto-failback=”enable”; in the file.  
5. Save the updated file.  
6. Reboot the host.  
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7. Use the cfgadmcommand to configure HBA paths.  
How you configure paths depends on how you are using your arrays in a SAN or  
direct attach environment. See the Sun StorageEdge SAN Foundation Software 4.4  
Configuration Guide (www.sun.com/products-n-solutions/hardware  
/docs/Network_Storage_Solutions/SAN/san_software/) for information  
about configuring paths.  
Enabling Multipathing Software for Solaris 10  
OS  
To enable multipathing software for all Fibre Channel (FC) ports on hosts running  
Solaris OS 10:  
1. Type the following command:  
# stmsboot -e  
Note – See the stmsboot(1M) man page for complete details.  
You are prompted to confirm the command:  
WARNING: This operation will require a reboot.  
Do you want to continue ? [y/n] (default: y)  
2. Press Return to reboot the host.  
Next Steps  
After you have installed and enabled multipathing on the data hosts, configure IP  
addressing on the array controllers as described in Chapter 6.  
Chapter 5 Data Hosts, HBAs, and Other Software  
71  
   
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CHAPTER  
6
Configuring IP Addressing  
In order for there to be an out-of-band Ethernet connection between the local  
controllers must have valid IP addresses.  
This chapter describes how to configure IP addressing on the local management host  
and the array controllers. It contains the following sections:  
“About IP Addressing” on page 73  
“Configuring the IP Address of the Array Controllers” on page 74  
About IP Addressing  
The Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array is managed out-of-band by way of a standard  
controllers and your management host.  
Perform the following procedures to ensure that the local management host and the  
array controllers have valid IP addresses:  
Configure IP addresses for the array controllers (see “Configuring the IP Address  
of the Array Controllers” on page 74)  
Configure an IP address for the management host (see the Sun StorageTek Common  
Array Manager Software Installation Guide)  
73  
     
Configuring the IP Address of the Array  
Controllers  
You can configure two types of IP addressing for the Ethernet port of each array  
controller:  
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) IP addressing – IP addresses for  
the Ethernet port are assigned dynamically from a DHCP server running  
bootstrap protocol (BOOTP) services. An IP address assigned to an Ethernet port  
is held only as long as needed. By default, DHCP is not enabled at initial power-  
on, so you must connect to it using a serial console or the Common Array  
Manager and the controller’s static IP address, and then enable DHCP.  
Static IP Addressing – You assign a specific IP address to the Ethernet port of each  
controller. Static IP addresses remain in effect until you modify or remove them or  
you change the method of IP addressing for the Ethernet port to DHCP.  
By default, if the array controllers cannot find a DHCP server upon initial power-  
on, an internal IP address is assigned to Ethernet port 1 of each controller:  
The Ethernet port of Controller A is assigned IP address 192.168.128.101  
The Ethernet port of Controller B is assigned IP address 192.168.128.102  
The default subnet mask for each port is 255.255.255.0  
To configure the Ethernet port on a controller with either dynamic or static IP  
addressing, see one of the following sections:  
“Configuring Dynamic (DHCP) IP Addressing” on page 74  
“Configuring Static IP Addressing” on page 75  
If BOOTP services are available on the DHCP server at initial array power on, this  
server assigns a dynamic IP address for the Ethernet port on each controller.  
If a DHCP server is not available, the controller tray defaults to internal static IP  
addresses as described in “Configuring the IP Address of the Array Controllers” on  
page 74.  
If you want to set up a DHCP server, refer to Appendix A for a description of how to  
configure BOOTP services in Sun Solaris or Microsoft Windows environments.  
You can restore DHCP IP addressing to Ethernet port 1 of either controller in either  
of three ways:  
Start a DHCP server on the same subnet, then reboot the 2500 Series Array.  
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Using the serial port interface (see “Using the Serial Port Interface to Assign IP  
Addresses” on page 75)  
Using the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager (see the Sun StorageTek  
Common Array Manager Software Installation Guide)  
There are two methods of assigning static IP addresses to the Ethernet ports of a  
controller:  
The serial port interface (see “Using the Serial Port Interface to Assign IP  
Addresses” on page 75)  
The Common Array Manager (see the Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager  
Software Installation Guide)  
Note – It is recommended that you use the serial port interface to assign IP  
addresses to the Ethernet port of each controller, if possible.  
Using the Serial Port Interface to Assign IP Addresses  
Ethernet port on the controller.  
To use the serial port interface to configure IP addressing for the Ethernet port of  
each controller, you must complete the tasks described in the following sections:  
“To Connect a Terminal to the Serial Port” on page 75  
“To Set Up the Terminal Emulation Program” on page 76  
“To Establish a Connection With the Serial Port” on page 77  
“To Configure the IP Addresses” on page 78  
To Connect a Terminal to the Serial Port  
You will establish a serial connection to each controller, Controller A and Controller  
B. Two mini-DIN to RJ45 serial port cables are supplied with each controller tray.  
Chapter 6 Configuring IP Addressing  
75  
             
To connect a terminal to the serial port of a controller:  
1. Connect the 6-pin mini-DIN connector of the serial cable to the serial port  
connector (diagnostic port) on the controller (FIGURE 1-3 on page 6).  
2. Connect the RJ-45 connector of the serial cable to the serial port connector on  
the terminal. It may be necessary to use an RJ45-DB9 adapter between the  
serial cable RJ-45 connector and the serial port of the terminal.  
3. For PC and laptop serial connections, you will also need to use a null modem.  
Connect the null modem between the serial cable or RJ45-DB9 adapter and the  
PC serial port.  
Note – If your PC does not have a serial port, you can use a USB–Serial Port adapter  
(separately available from third-party vendors; not included with 2500 Series Array  
Serial Cable Pinouts  
TABLE 6-1 shows the pinouts for the RJ45-DIN serial cable (Sun part number 530-  
3544) included with the 2500 Series Array shipkit.  
TABLE 6-1  
RJ45 to DIN Serial Cable Pinouts  
RJ45 ---------->  
PS2-miniDin  
1 Tx  
2
6 Rx  
3 Rx  
4,5,7  
6 Rx  
8
1 Rx  
3, 5 GRD  
2 Tx  
4
To Set Up the Terminal Emulation Program  
To set up a terminal emulation program to connect to the serial port:  
1. Select VT100 emulation.  
2. Remove any modem strings from the connection profile.  
3. Set up the connection profile with the following communication settings:  
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Data Rate: 38400  
Data Bits: 8  
Parity: None  
Stop Bits: 1  
Flow Control: None  
To Establish a Connection With the Serial Port  
To establish a connection with the serial port and display the Service Interface menu:  
1. Press Break.  
Note – The array serial port requires that the break character be received. Use the  
appropriate escape sequence for your terminal setup to send the required break  
character to the array controller, For example, you generate the Break character on  
some terminals by pressing the Control and Break keys simultaneously.  
The serial port responds with a request to synchronize with the baud rate of the  
terminal:  
Set baud rate: press <space> within 5 seconds  
2. Press the space bar within five seconds.  
The serial port confirms the established baud rate for the connection:  
Baud rate set to 38400  
3. Press Break (see Note above)  
The serial port responds with the following message:  
Press within 5 seconds: <S> for Service Interface, <BREAK>  
for baud rate  
4. Press S to access the Service Interface menu.  
Note – Send Break to synchronize the serial port to a different terminal port rate  
(see Note above).  
The serial port requests the serial port password:  
Enter Password to access Service Interface (60 sec timeout):  
->  
5. Type the serial port password, kra16wen, and press Enter.  
The Service Interface menu is displayed.  
Chapter 6 Configuring IP Addressing  
77  
   
Service Interface Main Menu  
==============================  
1) Display IP Configuration  
2) Change IP Configuration  
3) Reset Storage Array (SYMbol) Password  
Q) Quit Menu  
Enter Selection:  
To Configure the IP Addresses  
The serial port Service Interface menu enables you to set up the IP address  
configuration for the Ethernet port on the controller.  
To set up the IP address configuration for the Ethernet port on each controller:  
1. Select option 2, Change IP Configuration:  
Service Interface Main Menu  
==============================  
1) Display IP Configuration  
2) Change IP Configuration  
3) Reset Storage Array (SYMbol) Password  
Q) Quit Menu  
Enter Selection: 2  
2. Specify that you do not want dynamic IP addressing, using a DHCP server,  
used for this port:  
Configure using DHCP ? (Y/N): n  
The current or default IP configuration for the selected Ethernet port is displayed.  
3. Enter the static IP address and, optionally, a subnet mask for the Ethernet port:  
Note – If you are not using DHCP IP addressing and have a gateway IP address on  
your subnet, you must also specify a gateway IP address for the Ethernet port. This  
option displays only if the serial interface detects a gateway.  
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Press '.' to clear the field;  
Press '-' to return to the previous field;  
Press <ENTER> and then ^D to quit (Keep Changes)  
Current Configuration  
if1 : 192.168.128.101  
if1 : 255.255.255.0  
New Configuration  
IP Address  
Subnet Mask  
IP-address  
<ENTER>  
<ENTER>  
Gateway IP Address if1:  
4. When prompted, confirm the specified IP addressing.  
The Service Interface menu is redisplayed.  
5. Select option 1, Display IP Configuration, to confirm the IP address changes.  
Service Interface Main Menu  
==============================  
1) Display IP Configuration  
2) Change IP Configuration  
3) Reset Storage Array (SYMbol) Password  
Q) Quit Menu  
Enter Selection: 1  
The IP address configuration of the Ethernet port is displayed, and the Service  
Interface menu is redisplayed.  
6. Press Q to quit the Service Interface menu.  
7. Switch the serial cable to the Ethernet port on the other controller and repeat  
these steps to set the IP address on that controller as well.  
8. Power cycle the controllers off and on again to reset them with the new IP  
address.  
When you have completed the IP address configuration for the Ethernet port on  
both array controllers and power cycled them, see the Sun StorageTek Common Array  
Manager Software Installation Guide for instructions on registering and configuring the  
array.  
Chapter 6 Configuring IP Addressing  
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CHAPTER  
A
Configuring a DHCP Server  
This appendix describes how to configure bootstrap protocol (BOOTP) services in a  
Sun Solaris and Microsoft Windows environment. It contains the following sections:  
“Before You Begin” on page 81  
“Setting Up a Solaris DHCP Server” on page 81  
“Setting Up a Windows 2000 Advanced Server” on page 86  
Dynamic IP addresses are assigned through dynamic host control protocol (DHCP)  
server BOOTP services.  
Before You Begin  
You need each controller’s media access control (MAC) address to configure the  
DHCP server. The MAC address is located on the bar code label at the back of each  
redundant array of independent disks (RAID) controller. Since there are two  
controllers per array, you need two MAC addresses.  
Setting Up a Solaris DHCP Server  
The following procedure provides an example of how to set up a DHCP server with  
the BOOTP option for the Solaris 8, 9, and 10 Operating Systems. Your environment  
may require different steps.  
1. Modify the netmasksline of the /etc/nsswitch.conffile as shown here:  
#netmasks: nis [NOTFOUND=return] files  
netmasks: files nis [NOTFOUND=return]  
81  
             
2. Start the DHCP wizard by issuing the following command at the command  
line:  
/usr/sadm/admin/bin/dhcpmgr &  
The following window is displayed:  
The wizard will prompt you for information related to the configuration, network  
address, and subnet mask of the controller tray. Select or enter the following  
information:  
Data storage format: Text files  
Nameservice to store host records: Do not manage hosts records  
Length of lease:  
Network Address: Network address of Controller A  
Subnet Mask: For example, 255.255.255.0  
Network Type: Local-Area (LAN)  
Router: Use router discovery protocol  
Your summary page should look similar to the following example:  
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3. Verify your configuration information and click Finish.  
4. When you are prompted to configure addresses for the server, click Yes.  
The Add Address to Network wizard is displayed.  
5. Enter the following information:  
Number of IP addresses  
Name of managing server  
Starting IP address  
Configuration macro to be used for configuring the clients  
Lease type  
Your summary page should look similar to the following example:  
Chapter A Configuring a DHCP Server  
83  
6. Verify your configuration information and click Finish.  
The DHCP Manager displays the following:  
7. In the Address Properties window, do the following:  
a. In each Client ID field, enter 01followed by the MAC address that is  
printed on the back of the RAID controller. For example:  
0100A0E80F924C  
b. Toward the bottom of the window, select “Assign only to BOOTP clients.”  
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c. Click OK.  
The DHCP manager updates the status and client ID, as shown in the  
following example:  
8. Go to Modify Service Options and do the following:  
a. Select Detect Duplicate IP addresses.  
b. Under BOOTP Compatibility, select Automatic.  
c. Select Restart Server, as shown in the following example.  
Chapter A Configuring a DHCP Server  
85  
d. Click OK.  
After the configuration process has finished, the DHCP server provides BOOTP  
services to the MAC address you entered for each RAID controller.  
9. To verify that the BOOTP service is running, go to Service > Restart.  
10. After you power on the array, ping the address.  
If the ping responds with ‘alive’, the DHCP server BOOTP operation was  
successful.  
Setting Up a Windows 2000 Advanced  
Server  
Before you begin, make sure the following requirements are met:  
Windows 2000 server and the array are on the same subnet.  
IP addresses that are assigned to the RAID controllers do not conflict.  
The array is in BOOTP IP addressing mode (the default setting for a new array).  
The Windows 2000 Server setup CD is available.  
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The following procedure provides an example of how to set up DHCP with the  
BOOTP option on the Windows 2000 Advanced Server. Your environment may  
require different steps.  
Installing the DHCP Server  
To install DHCP server on the Windows 2000 Advanced Server:  
1. From the Control Panel, go to Administrative Tools > Configure Your Server.  
2. Select DHCP from the Networking drop-down menu on the left.  
The wizard instructs you to use the Windows Components wizard to add the  
DHCP component.  
3. Start the Windows Components wizard and double-click Networking Services.  
4. Select Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), click the check box to its  
left, and click OK.  
The Windows Components wizard is displayed.  
5. Click Next.  
6. If Terminal Services Setup is displayed, select Remote administration mode.  
Click Next.  
If your server has obtained an address from a DHCP server for its own address,  
a warning is displayed.  
7. Click OK to accept the warning.  
Local Area Connection Properties is displayed.  
8. Assign a static IP address to the server, or click Server to keep DHCP  
addressing for the server. Click OK.  
9. Click Finish to exit the Windows Components wizard.  
The DHCP server is now installed. The next step is to configure the server.  
Configuring the DHCP Server  
To configure the DHCP server:  
1. From the Control Panel, go to Administrative Tools > Computer Management >  
Services and Application > DHCP.  
Chapter A Configuring a DHCP Server  
87  
     
2. From the Action menu, select New Scope.  
The New Scope wizard is displayed.  
3. Enter the following information as prompted:  
Scope name and description:  
IP address range (for example, 192.168.0.170to 192.168.0.171)  
Subnet mask (for example, 255.255.255.0)  
Add exclusions (do not exclude any IP addresses)  
Lease duration (accept the default of 8 days)  
Router (default gateway) of your subnet (for example, 192.168.0.1)  
Domain name, WINS server (these are not needed)  
Activate Scope? (select “Yes, I want to activate this scope now”)  
4. Click Finish to exit the wizard.  
The contents of the DHCP server are listed.  
5. Right-click Scope [ipaddress] scope-name and select Properties.  
6. In the Scope Properties box, click the Advanced tab.  
7. Select BOOTP only, set the lease duration to Unlimited, and click OK.  
8. Right-click Reservations.  
The Controller A Properties box is displayed.  
9. Enter the IP address and the MAC address for Controller A. Click Add.  
The Controller B Properties box is displayed.  
10. Enter the IP address and the MAC address for Controller B. Click Add.  
The controllers are added to the right of the Reservations listing.  
11. Right-click Scope [ipaddress] scope-name to disable the scope.  
12. Click Yes to confirm disabling of the scope.  
13. Right-click Scope and select Activate.  
The DHCP server is now configured with the BOOTP option for the array  
network.  
14. Power on or power cycle the array modules.  
15. Click Address Leases in the left pane to check the DHCP server leases.  
The lease expiration displays the following status for each RAID controller:  
Reservation (active)  
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If the lease expiration for the controllers is inactive, try refreshing the list. If the  
lease is still inactive, check the following:  
Are the IP addresses allocated for BOOTP conflicting?  
Were the correct MAC addresses added to the DHCP server for the array  
controllers?  
Are the DHCP server and array on the same subnet?  
Is the gateway configured correctly on the DHCP server?  
The RAID controllers can gain a lease and an IP address, but they cannot respond  
out of the subnet for the software if the gateway is not configured properly.  
Are the RAID controllers set up for BOOTP access?  
It is possible that they were previously configured to have static IP addresses. You  
must be sure when you move an array that you change the array’s IP addresses to  
IP addresses on the new subnet before setting up BOOTP services.  
Chapter A Configuring a DHCP Server  
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CHAPTER  
B
This appendix describes using the DC Power Unit for the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series  
Arrays in the following sections:  
“DC Power Overview” on page 91  
“Installation Notes for DC Power” on page 92  
“Ship Kit Changes” on page 93  
“DC Power LEDS” on page 93  
“Connecting Power Cables” on page 94  
“Turning Off the DC Power During an Emergency” on page 96  
“Relocation Cautions” on page 96  
DC Power Overview  
The Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Arrays can be ordered with a DC power connection  
and connector cables.  
Caution – A qualified service person is required to make the DC power connection  
per NEC and CEC guidelines. A two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker is required  
between the DC power source and the array module for over-current and short-  
circuit protection. Before turning off any power switches on a DC-powered module,  
you must disconnect the two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker.  
Caution – Electrical grounding hazard – This equipment is designed to permit the  
connection of the D.C. supply circuit to the earthing conductor at the equipment.  
91  
   
FIGURE B-1 shows the locations of the power-fan assemblies.  
FIGURE B-1 Power Fan Assembly Locations.  
Caution – Risk of electrical shock – This unit has more than one power source.  
To remove all power from the unit, all DC MAINS must be disconnected by  
removing all power connectors (item 4 in Appendix FIGURE B-2) from the power  
supplies.  
FIGURE B-2 DC Power Connector Cable and Source Wires  
Installation Notes for DC Power  
The sections that follow provide hardware information about DC power.  
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“Ship Kit Changes” on page 93  
“DC Power LEDS” on page 93  
“Connecting Power Cables” on page 94  
“Turning Off the DC Power During an Emergency” on page 96  
“Relocation Cautions” on page 96  
Ship Kit Changes  
If the DC power option is ordered, two DC power connector cables are provided  
with each controller tray for connection to centralized DC power plant equipment.  
Caution – A qualified service person is required to make the DC power connection  
per NEC and CEC guidelines. A two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker is required  
between the DC power source and the array module for over-current and short-  
circuit protection. Before turning off any power switches on a DC-powered module,  
you must disconnect the two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker.  
DC Power LEDS  
FIGURE B-3 shows the LEDs, on/off power switch, and power cable receptacle on the  
back of the DC power module.  
FIGURE B-3 DC Power Module LEDs, Power Switch, and Power Cable Receptacle.  
Chapter B Using DC Power  
93  
     
TABLE B-1 lists the LEDs for DC power.  
TABLE B-1 DC Power Module LEDs.  
LED  
Color  
On  
Off  
DC Power (DC Good) Green  
DC power from the  
power-fan assembly is  
available.  
DC power from the power-  
fan assembly is not  
available.  
Service Action Allowed Blue  
The power-fan assembly The power-fan assembly  
can be removed from the cannot be removed from the  
tray.  
tray.  
Service Action Required Amber  
(Fault)  
A fault exists within the Normal condition  
power-fan assembly.  
Power (DC Good)  
Green  
Power is present  
Power is not present  
Connecting Power Cables  
Caution – A qualified service person is required to make the DC power  
connection per NEC and CEC guidelines. A two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker is  
required between the DC power source and the array module for over-current and  
short-circuit protection. Before turning off any power switches on a DC-powered  
module, you must disconnect the two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker.  
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Caution – Ensure that you do not turn on power to the array module or the  
connected drive modules until this guide instructs you to do so. For the proper  
procedure for turning on the power, see ““Connecting Power Cables” on page 94.”  
Caution – Electrical grounding hazard – This equipment is designed to permit the  
connection of the D.C. supply circuit to the earthing conductor at the equipment.  
Connecting the Cables  
1. Disconnect the two-pole 20-amp DC circuit breaker for the storage array.  
2. Ensure that all DC power switches on the DC-powered array module and all  
DC power switches on any connected, DC-powered drive modules are turned  
off.  
3. Connect the DC power connector cable to the DC power connector on the back  
of the array module.  
Caution – The three source wires on the DC power connector cable (–48 VDC)  
connect the array module to centralized DC power plant equipment, typically  
through a bus bar located above the cabinet.  
4. A qualified service person is required to make the DC power connection per  
NEC and CEC guidelines. A two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker is required  
between the DC power source and DC-powered modules for over-current and  
short-circuit protection. Connect the DC power source wires on the other end  
of the DC power connector cable to the centralized DC power plant equipment  
as follows (see “DC Power Connector Cable and Source Wires” on page 92).  
a. Connect the brown –48-VDC supply wire to the negative terminal.  
b. Connect the blue return wire to the positive terminal.  
c. Connect the green/yellow ground wire to the ground terminal.  
5. If applicable, connect a DC power cable to each DC-powered expansion tray in  
the storage array.  
Chapter B Using DC Power  
95  
   
Turning Off the DC Power During an Emergency  
Caution – Potential loss of data – An emergency shutdown of the storage array  
might not allow the server to complete its I/O to the storage array.  
Note – Before turning off the power switches on a DC-powered tray you must  
disconnect the two-pole 20-amp circuit breaker.  
Relocation Cautions  
Use the following guidelines when relocating trays or drives from one storage array  
to another.  
Caution – Potential data loss – Moving a array or array components that are  
configured as part of a volume group can result in data loss. To prevent data loss,  
always consult a Customer Support representative before relocating configured  
drives, controller trays or expansion trays.  
Note – Trays in arrays can be connected to the DC power supply (–48 VDC). Before  
turning off any power switches on a DC-powered tray, you must disconnect the two-  
pole 20-amp circuit breaker.  
Do not move controller trays or expansion trays that are part of a volume group  
configuration. If you must move array components, contact a Customer Support  
representative for procedures. A Customer Support representative might direct you  
to complete several tasks prior to undertaking the relocation. These tasks might  
include:  
Creating, saving, and printing an array profile of each storage array that is  
affected by the relocation of a drive or tray.  
Performing a complete backup of all data on the drives that you intend to move.  
Verifying that the volume group and each of its associated volumes on the  
affected array have an Optimal status.  
Determining the location and status of any global hot spares associated with the  
affected storage array.  
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Glossary  
Definitions obtained from the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA)  
Dictionary are indicated with “(SNIA)” at the end. For the complete SNIA  
Dictionary, go to www.snia.org/education/dictionary.  
A
agent  
The component of the system monitoring and diagnostic software that collects  
health and asset information about the array.  
alarm  
A type of event that requires service action. See also event.  
alert  
A subtype of an event that requires user intervention. The term actionable event often  
describes an alert. See also event.  
array  
Multiple disk drives that function as a single storage device. A high-availability  
(HA) array configuration has redundant controllers and expansion trays of disk  
drives.  
array hot-spare  
A disk that serves as a hot-spare within an array as part of the storage pool; a  
reserve disk that can be made available to all virtual disks within an array. See also  
hot-spare.  
97  
       
B
C
block  
The amount of data sent or received by the host per I/O operation; the size of a data  
unit.  
capacity  
The amount of storage you must allocate to storage elements, including volumes,  
pools, and virtual disks. Capacity planning should include allocations for volume  
snapshots and volume copies.  
CLI  
Command-line interface. The SSCS command-line interface is available from the  
remote CLI client or through an SSCS directory on the Solaris Operating System  
management software station.  
controller tray  
A tray with an installed redundant RAID controller pair. In a Sun StorageTek 2500  
Series array, 1x1, 1x2, 1x3, and 1x4 array types are available.  
control path  
The route used for communication of system management information, usually an  
out-of-band connection.  
customer LAN  
See site LAN.  
D
DAS  
See direct attached storage (DAS).  
data host  
Any host that uses the system for storage. A data host can be connected directly to  
the array (direct attach storage, or DAS) or can be connected to an external switch  
that supports multiple data hosts (storage area network, or SAN). See also host.  
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data path  
The route taken by a data packet between a data host and the storage device.  
direct attached storage (DAS)  
A storage architecture in which one or two hosts that access data are connected  
physically to a storage array.  
disk  
A physical drive component that stores data.  
E
event  
A notification of something that happened on a device. There are many types of  
events, and each type describes a separate occurrence. See also alarm and alert.  
expansion tray  
A tray that does not have a RAID controller, used to expand the capacity of an array.  
This type of tray must be attached to a controller tray to function.  
extent  
A set of contiguous blocks with consecutive logical addresses on a physical or  
virtual disk.  
F
failover and recovery  
The process of changing the data path automatically to an alternate path.  
The percentage of faults detected against all possible faults or against all faults of a  
given type.  
FC  
See Fibre Channel (FC).  
Fibre Channel (FC)  
A set of standards for a serial I/O bus capable of transferring data between two  
ports at up to 100 megabytes/second, with standards proposals to go to higher  
speeds. Fibre Channel supports point to point, arbitrated loop, and switched  
Glossary  
99  
     
topologies. Fibre Channel was completely developed through industry cooperation,  
unlike SCSI, which was developed by a vendor and submitted for standardization  
after the fact.  
Fibre Channel switch  
A networking device that can send packets directly to a port associated with a given  
network address in a Fibre Channel storage area network (SAN). Fibre Channel  
switches are used to expand the number of servers that can connect to a particular  
storage port. Each switch is managed by its own management software.  
An assembly component that is designed to be replaced on site, without the system  
having to be returned to the manufacturer for repair.  
FRU  
H
HBA  
See host bus adapter (HBA).  
host  
As a function of the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series array configuration, a representation  
of a data host that is mapped to initiators and volumes to create a storage domain.  
See also data host, initiator.  
host bus adapter (HBA)  
An I/O adapter that connects a host I/O bus to a computer’s memory system.  
Abbreviated HBA. Host bus adapter is the preferred term in SCSI contexts. Adapter  
and NIC are the preferred terms in Fibre Channel contexts. The term NIC is used in  
networking contexts such as Ethernet and token ring. See also initiator.  
host group  
A group of hosts with common storage characteristics that can be mapped to  
volumes. See also host.  
hot-spare  
The drive used by a controller to replace a failed disk. See also array hot-spare.  
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I
in-band traffic  
System management traffic that uses the data path between a host and a storage  
device. See also out-of-band traffic.  
initiator  
A system component that initiates an I/O operation over a Fibre Channel (FC) network.  
If allowed by FC fabric zoning rules, each host connection within the FC network has the  
ability to initiate transactions with the storage array. Each host in the FC network  
represents a separate initiator, so if a host is connected to the system through two host  
bus adapters (HBAs), the system identifies two different initiators (similar to multi-  
homed, Ethernet-based hosts). In contrast, when multipathing is used in round-robin  
mode, multiple HBAs are grouped together, and the multipathing software identifies the  
group of HBAs as a single initiator.  
IOPS  
A measure of transaction speed, representing the number of input and output  
transactions per second.  
L
LAN  
Local area network.  
logical unit number (LUN)  
The SCSI identifier for a volume as it is recognized by a particular host. The same  
volume can be represented by a different LUN to a different host.  
LUN  
M
MAC address  
See media access control (MAC) address.  
management host  
A Solaris host serving the configuration, management, and monitoring software for  
the Sun StorageTek 2500 Series array. The software on the station can be accessed  
with a browser to run the browser interface or with a remote scripting command-  
line interface (CLI) client to access the SSCSCLI commands.  
Glossary  
101  
     
master / alternate master  
A design for reliability that uses redundant configuration. Array configurations  
share master/alternate master configurations: each array configuration has two  
controller trays that are grouped as one host. In each case, the master component  
uses the IP address and name. If the master fails, the alternate master assumes the IP  
address and name and takes over the master’s functions.  
media access control (MAC) address  
The physical address identifying an Ethernet controller board. The MAC address,  
also called an Ethernet address, is set at the factory and must be mapped to the IP  
address of the device.  
mirroring  
A form of storage – also called RAID Level 1, independent copy, and real-time copy –  
whereby two or more independent, identical copies of data are maintained on separate  
media. Typical mirroring technologies enable the cloning of data sets to provide  
redundancy for a storage system.  
multipathing  
A design for redundancy that provides at least two physical paths to a target.  
N
O
out-of-band traffic  
System management traffic outside of the primary data path that uses an Ethernet  
P
PDU  
See power distribution unit (PDU).  
pool  
See storage pool.  
power distribution unit (PDU)  
The assembly that provides power management for the system. The redundant  
design uses two PDUs in each system so that the system’s data path continues to  
function if one of the PDUs fails.  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
     
profile  
See storage profile.  
provisioning  
The process of allocation and assignment of storage to hosts.  
R
RAID  
An acronym for Redundant Array of Independent Disks, a family of techniques for  
managing multiple disks to deliver desirable cost, data availability, and performance  
characteristics to host environments. Also, a phrase adopted from the 1988 SIGMOD  
paper A Case for Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks.  
remote monitoring  
Monitoring of the functions and performance of a hardware system from a location  
other than where the hardware resides.  
remote scripting CLI client  
A command-line interface (CLI) that enables you to manage the system from a remote  
management host. The client communicates with the management software through a  
secure out-of-band interface, HTTPS, and provides the same control and monitoring  
capability as the browser interface. The client must be installed on a host that has  
S
SAN  
See storage area network (SAN).  
site LAN  
The local area network at your site. When the system is connected to your LAN, the  
system can be managed through a browser from any host on the LAN.  
snapshot  
An copy of a volume’s data at a specific point in time.  
SSCS  
Sun Storage Command System. The command-line interface (CLI) that can be used  
to manage the array.  
Glossary  
103  
     
storage area network (SAN)  
An architecture in which the storage elements are connected to each other and to a server  
that is the access point for all systems that use the SAN to store data.  
storage domain  
A secure container that holds a subset of the system’s total storage resources. Multiple  
storage domains can be created to securely partition the system’s total set of storage  
resources. This enables you to organize multiple departments or applications into a single  
storage management infrastructure.  
storage pool  
A container that groups physical disk capacity (abstracted as virtual disks in the  
browser interface) into a logical pool of available storage capacity. A storage pool’s  
characteristics are defined by a storage profile. You can create multiple storage pools  
to segregate storage capacity for use in various types of applications (for example,  
high throughput and online transaction-processing applications).  
storage profile  
A defined set of storage performance characteristics such as RAID level, segment size,  
dedicated hot-spare, and virtualization strategy. You can choose a predefined profile  
suitable for the application that is using the storage, or you can create a custom profile.  
storage tray  
An enclosure containing disks. A tray with dual RAID controllers is called a  
controller tray; a tray without controllers is called an expansion tray.  
stripe size  
The number of blocks in a stripe. A striped array’s stripe size is the stripe depth  
multiplied by the number of member extents. A parity RAID array’s stripe size is the  
stripe depth multiplied by one less than the number of member extents. See also  
striping.  
striping  
Short for data striping; also known as RAID Level 0 or RAID 0. A mapping technique in  
which fixed-size consecutive ranges of virtual disk data addresses are mapped to  
successive array members in a cyclic pattern. (SNIA).  
T
target  
The system component that receives a SCSI I/O command. (SNIA).  
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Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
         
thin-scripting client  
See remote scripting CLI client.  
tray  
See storage tray.  
U
V
virtual disk  
A set of disk blocks presented to an operating environment as a range of  
consecutively numbered logical blocks with disk-like storage and I/O semantics.  
The virtual disk is the disk array object that most closely resembles a physical disk  
from the operating environment’s viewpoint.  
volume  
A logically contiguous range of storage blocks allocated from a single pool and presented  
by a disk array as a logical unit number (LUN). A volume can span the physical devices  
that constitute the array, or it can be wholly contained within a single physical disk,  
depending on its virtualization strategy, size, and the internal array configuration. The  
array controller makes these details transparent to applications running on the attached  
server system.  
volume snapshot  
See snapshot.  
W
WWN  
World Wide Name. A unique 64-bit number assigned by a recognized naming  
authority such as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) that  
identifies a connection (device) or a set of connections to the network. The World  
Wide Name (WWN) is constructed from the number that identifies the naming  
authority, the number that identifies the manufacturer, and a unique number for the  
specific connection.  
Glossary  
105  
106  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
Index  
2500 series array product overview, 2  
A
host, 69  
Ethernet ports directly to management host, 51  
array  
configuration naming convention, 43  
configuring controller IP addressing, 74  
powering on, 62  
power connections, 42  
comments  
B
battery  
cache memory, 6  
book  
configuring IP addressing using the controller serial  
port, 75  
connecting a terminal to a controller serial port, 75  
connecting power cables, 42  
related documentation, xiv  
submitting comments to Sun, xvi  
connecting the management host, 49  
connectors  
C
cabinet, 1  
data host, 7  
I/O module SAS, 10  
attaching rails to a standard 19-inch cabinet, 27  
107  
 
management host, 6  
server configuration  
before you begin, 81  
contents  
Windows 2000 Advanced Server  
installation, 87  
Windows 2000 Advanced Server  
requirements, 86  
controller  
connecting Ethernet ports to a management  
connecting Ethernet ports to directly to  
management host, 51  
and the serial port, 77  
description of  
numbering scheme, 17  
controller tray  
tray ID and slot designation, 17  
host, 69  
front-access components, 2  
I/O module, 10  
front-access components, 2  
LEDs on the front, 3  
SAS connectors, 10  
ST1530 model, description of, 8  
CRUs  
ST2530 controller, 8  
setting up a terminal, 76  
removing, 39  
Ethernet connection  
controller trays, 6  
Ethernet ports  
D
setting up, 66  
data host software  
about installing for a non-Solaris host, 69  
downloading software for a non-Solaris OS, 69  
installing for a non-Solaris host, 67, 69, 70  
connecting directly to management host, 51  
connecting to a management LAN, 50  
connecting using a hub, 51  
data path redundancy, 6  
DC power option  
108  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
power-fan assembly, 13  
ship kit contents, 26  
F
fans  
power-fan assembly, 9  
fault LED, 16  
MAC address location, 81  
Fibre Channel  
management host  
connector cable types, 7  
firmware, 6  
multipathing software  
front-access tray components, 3  
H
host  
N
New Scope wizard, 88  
connecting for management, 49  
setting up a data host, 66  
hot swap  
I
I/O module  
host, 70  
host, 67, 69  
connecting cables, 42  
LEDs, 13  
powering off the array, 63  
array, 62  
before powering-on, 61  
preparing the tray for installation, 25  
IP addressing  
about, 73  
configuring DHCP, 74  
rackmount kit preparation, 24  
L
LEDs  
rails  
attaching to standard 19-inch cabinet, 27  
attaching to Sun Rack 900/1000, 27  
attaching to unthreaded cabinet  
attaching rails to unthreaded cabinet, 31  
fault, 16  
on the front of the trays, 3  
on the rear of the ST2540 controller tray, 11  
Index  
109  
power-fan assembly, 9  
LEDs on the rear, 11  
power-fan assembly, 9  
static IP addressing  
tray, 5  
data path, 6  
I/O module, 10  
RJ45-DB9 adapter, 76  
pinouts, 76  
T
S
establishing communication with a controller  
SAS connectors  
third party web sites, xvi  
setting up terminal emulation, 76  
tray  
serial port cable, 75  
SFP transceivers  
intertray cabling, 42  
preparing the cabinet for installation, 26  
tools required for installation, 23  
ship kit  
expansion tray, 26  
preparing the rackmount kit for, 24  
software  
software overview, 19  
ST2500 drive expansion tray  
disk drives, 16  
ST2501 drive expansion tray  
I/O module, 10  
U
universal rail kit  
attaching to a standard 19-inch cabinet, 27  
attaching to a Sun Rack 900/1000, 27  
attaching to unthreaded cabinet, 31  
power-fan assembly, 9  
ST2530 controller tray  
110  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  
contents, 24  
part numbers, 24  
unpacking a tray, 25  
W
web sites  
third-party, xvi  
Index  
111  
112  
Sun StorageTek 2500 Series Array Hardware Installation Guide • March 2007  

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