Step a, Step c, Step 4 – Sun Microsystems Sun Fire X4200 M2 User Manual
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Sun Fire X4100 and Sun Fire X4200 Installation Guide • October 2006
a. Identify the MAC address of the ILOM SP from one of the following locations
and write it down:
■
CLI commands. The SP has a serial port to which you can attach a terminal
device. If you log in to the SP and type the CLI command
show /SP/network
, the SP displays the current MAC address.
■
The Customer Information Sheet that is shipped with your server.
■
The system BIOS setup screen. Press F2 during bootup, then choose Advanced
→
IPMI 2.0 Configuration
→
Set LAN Configuration
→
MAC address.
b. Log in to your DHCP server and view its DHCP log file.
Note –
Different DHCP server applications running on different operating systems
store these log files in different locations. Consult your DHCP system administrator
to locate the correct path to the log file.
c. Identify the IP address in the log file that corresponds to the MAC address of
your ILOM SP.
Typically, DHCP log file entries are individual lines with the following comma-
separated fields:
ID, Date, Time, Description, IP Address, Host Name, MAC Address
Locate the MAC address of your ILOM SP in the MAC Address (seventh) field of
the correct DHCP file entry and record the corresponding value of the IP Address
(fifth) field. This is the IP address that you must use to access the system
management firmware applications on your ILOM SP.
4. Open a session to the ILOM SP using the IP address that you obtained in
You can use the CLI or the GUI interface.
■
To establish a Secure Shell (SSH) connection to the ILOM SP CLI, type the
appropriate connection command in the SSH application. For example, to connect
to the SP with the DHCP-assigned IP address of 129.144.82.20, type the following
command:
# ssh -l root 129.144.82.20
The default user name is root, which was included in the ssh command. When
you are prompted, enter the default password for the SP, changeme. You can then
enter commands to manage user accounts or to monitor the status of devices on
your server. See the example in
.