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Making basic connections, Connecting to devices, Connecting to other switches – HP StorageWorks 2.128 SAN Director Switch User Manual

Page 31: Activating ports on demand

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Fabric OS 5.x administrator guide

31

switch vendor. You might need to generate a license key from a transaction key supplied with your

purchase. If so, launch an Internet browser and visit the HP web site:

http://webkey.external.hp.com/welcome.asp

. Select Generate a license key and follow the instructions

to generate the key.
By default, ports 0 through 15 are activated on the SAN Switch 4/32. Each Port upgrade license

activates the next group of eight ports in numerical order. Before installing a license key, you must insert

transceivers in the ports to be activated. Remember to insert the transceivers in the lowest group of

inactive port numbers first. For example, if only 16 ports are currently active and you are installing one

8-Port Upgrade License key, make sure to insert the transceivers in ports 16 through 23. If you later install

a second license key, insert the transceivers in ports 24 through 31. For details on inserting transceivers,

see the HP StorageWorks SAN Switch 4/32 installation guide.
After you install a license key, you must enable the ports to complete their activation. You can do so

without disrupting switch operation by issuing the

portEnable

command on each port. You can also

disable and reenable the switch to activate ports.

Activating Ports on Demand

1.

Connect to the switch and log in as admin.

2.

Optional: To verify the current states of the ports, issue the

portShow

command.

In the

portShow

output, the Licensed field indicates whether or not the port is licensed.

3.

Install the HP Port Upgrade License.
For instructions, see

Maintaining licensed features

” on page 26.

4.

Issue the

portEnable

command to enable the ports.

5.

Optional: issue the

portShow

command to check the newly activated ports.

If you remove a Port Upgrade License, the licensed ports become disabled after the next platform reboot

or the next port deactivation.

Making basic connections

You can make basic connections to devices and to other switches.
Before connecting a version 4.0.0 (or later) switch to a fabric that contains switches running earlier

firmware versions, you must first set the same port identifier (PID) format on all the switches. The presence

of different PID formats in a fabric causes fabric segmentation.
For information on PID formats and related procedures, see ”

Selecting a PID format

” on page 215.

For information on configuring the routing of connections, see ”

Routing traffic

” on page 97.

For information on configuring extended interswitch connections, see ”

Administering extended fabrics

” on

page 163.

Connecting to devices

To minimize port logins, power off all devices before connecting them to the switch. For devices that

cannot be powered off, first use the

portDisable

command to disable the port on the switch, and then

connect the device. When powering the devices back on, wait for each device to complete the fabric

login before powering on the next one.

Connecting to other switches

See the SAN Switch installation guide for your switch model for ISL connection and cable management

information. The standard (default) ISL mode is L0, which you can configure with the portCfgLongDistance

command. ISL Mode L0 is a static mode, with the following maximum ISL distances:

10 km at 1 Gbit/second

5 km at 2 Gbit/second

2.5 km at 4 Gbit/second

ISL mode L0 is available on all Fabric OS releases. When you upgrade from Fabric OS 4.0.0 to Fabric

4.1.0 or later, all extended ISL ports are set to L0 mode.