Fabric OS 6.2 administrator guide 209
1.
Connect to the switch and log in as any user type.
2.
Enter the
ad
--
select
command and the Admin Domain you want to switch to.
3.
Leave the new Admin Domain context by exiting from the shell.
logout
You cannot switch to another Admin Domain context from within the shell created by
ad
--
select
.
You must first exit the shell, and then enter the
ad
--
select
command again.
The following example switches to the AD12 context and back. Note that the prompt changes to
display the Admin Domain.
switch:admin>
ad --select 12
switch:AD12:admin>
logout
switch:admin>
Admin Domain interactions with other Fabric OS features
The administrative domain feature provides interaction with other Fabric OS features and across third-party
applications. You can manage Admin Domains with Web Tools as well as the CLI. If the current Admin
Domain owns the switch, you can perform Fabric Watch operations.
Admin Domain interactions do not extend to user session tunneling across switches. A user logged into a
switch can control only the local switch ports as specified in the Admin Domain.
When the fabric is in secure mode, the following applies:
•
There is no support for ACL configuration under each Administrative Domain.
•
ACL configuration commands are allowed only in AD0 and AD255. None of the policy configurations
are validated with AD membership.
Table 53
lists some of the Fabric OS features and considerations that apply when using Admin Domains.
Table 53
Admin Domain interaction with Fabric OS features (continued)
Fabric OS feature
Admin Domain interaction
ACLs
If no user-defined Admin Domains exist, you can run ACL configuration
commands in only AD0 and AD255.
If any user-defined Admin Domains exist, you can run ACL configuration
commands only in AD255.
You
cannot
use ACL configuration commands or validate ACL policy
configurations against AD membership under each Admin Domain.
Advanced
Performance
Monitoring (APM)
APM-related filter setup and statistics viewing is allowed only if the local switch is
part of the current Admin Domain.
Fabric Watch
Fabric Watch configuration operations are allowed only if the local switch is part
of the current Admin Domain.
FC-FC Routing Service
•
You can create LSAN zones as a physical fabric administrator or as an
individual AD administrator. The LSAN zone can be part of the root zone
database or the AD zone database.
•
FCR collects the LSAN zones from all ADs. If both edge fabrics have matching
LSAN zones and both devices are online, FCR triggers a device import.
•
LSAN zone enforcement in the local fabric occurs only if the AD member list
contains both of the devices (local and imported device) specified in the
LSAN zone.
•
To support legacy applications, WWNs are reported based on the AD
context using NAA=5. As a result, you cannot use the NAA=5 field alone in
the WWN to detect an FC router.
FDMI
FDMI operations are allowed only in AD0 and AD255.
Summary of Contents for A7533A - Brocade 4Gb SAN Switch Base
Page 1: ...HP StorageWorks Fabric OS 6 2 administrator guide Part number 5697 0016 Edition May 2009 ...
Page 24: ...24 ...
Page 99: ...Fabric OS 6 2 administrator guide 99 ...
Page 100: ...100 Managing user accounts ...
Page 118: ...116 Configuring standard security features ...
Page 164: ...162 Configuring advanced security features ...
Page 234: ...232 Installing and maintaining firmware ...
Page 268: ...266 Administering advanced zoning ...
Page 284: ...282 Configuring Enterprise class platforms ...
Page 292: ...290 Routing traffic ...
Page 294: ...292 Interoperability for merged SANs ...
Page 302: ...300 Configuring the Distributed Management Server ...
Page 334: ...332 iSCSI gateway service ...
Page 340: ...338 Administering NPIV ...
Page 407: ...Fabric OS 6 2 administrator guide 405 ...
Page 408: ...406 Using the FC FC routing service ...
Page 438: ...434 Administering extended fabrics ...
Page 460: ...456 Administering ISL trunking ...
Page 516: ...512 FICON fabrics ...
Page 526: ...522 Configuring and monitoring FICON Extension Services ...
Page 540: ...536 Configuring the PID format ...
Page 544: ...540 Understanding legacy password behavior ...
Page 546: ...542 Mixed fabric configurations for non merge SANs ...
Page 550: ...546 Migrating from an MP Router to a 400 MP Router ...
Page 558: ...554 Inband Management ...
Page 572: ...568 ...