Requirements for configuring chap, Iscsi and chap terminology, Iscsi and chap – HP LeftHand P4000 Virtual SAN Appliance Software User Manual
Page 232
Figure 110 Differentiating types of CHAP
CHAP is optional. However, if you configure 1-way or 2-way CHAP, you must remember to configure
both the server and the iSCSI initiator with the appropriate characteristics.
lists the requirements for configuring CHAP.
Requirements for configuring CHAP
Table 65 Configuring iSCSI CHAP
What to Configure in the iSCSI Initiator
What to Configure for the Server in
the SAN/iQ Software
CHAP Level
No configuration requirements
Initiator node name only
CHAP not required
Enter the target secret (12-character
minimum) when logging on to available
target.
1-way CHAP
•
CHAP name*
•
Target secret
2-way CHAP
•
Enter the initiator secret
(12-character minimum).
•
CHAP name*
•
Target secret
•
Enter the target secret (12-character
minimum).
•
Initiator secret
* If using CHAP with a single node only, use the initiator node name as the CHAP name.
iSCSI and CHAP terminology
The iSCSI and CHAP terms used vary based on the operating system and iSCSI initiator you are
using. The table below lists the terms for two common iSCSI initiators.
Table 66 iSCSI terminology
Linux
VMWare
Microsoft
SAN/iQ CMC
Refer to the documentation
for the iSCSI initiator you are
iSCSI Name
Initiator Node Name
Initiator Node Name
using. Linux iSCSI initiators
may use a command line
interface or a configuration
file.
CHAP Name
Not used
CHAP Name
CHAP Secret
Target Secret
Target Secret
N/A
Secret
Initiator Secret
232 iSCSI and the HP P4000 SAN Solution