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Vc server profile movement example – HP Insight Management-Software User Manual

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Using VCEM, system administrators can quickly deploy, replace and recover servers and their
associated workloads by simply assigning or reassigning the Virtual Connect server connection
profile to an enclosure bay. The example in the following figure illustrates a server profile movement
operation from “Server A” to “Server C” using VCEM.

NOTE:

The LANs associated with each uplink port and the attributes of the Virtual Connect server

profile remain exactly the same; only the location of the server profile has changed.

When a Virtual Connect server connection profile is moved, the associated MAC, WWN, boot
from SAN parameters and related workload always move with the server profile.

From the VCEM GUI server profiles can be moved manually or scripted using the profile failover
capability to a user-defined spare server. A server profile can be moved within the same VC Domain
or to any other Domain in the same Virtual Connect Domain Group, whether it is in the same rack,
across the datacenter or at another location. The profile movement and failover functionality
provided by VCEM can be used to provide cost-effective server blade recovery, perform proactive
hardware maintenance with reduced downtimes, and control rapid server repurposing to meet
changing workload and application priorities. When moving Virtual Connect server profiles, the
fastest completion times are achieved when the corresponding source and target servers are
configured to boot-from-SAN. The automated profile failover functionality delivered in VCEM
requires a boot-from-SAN environment.

Figure 1-4 VC server profile movement example

Understanding VCEM operations

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