
OWC JUPITER CALLISTO
INITIAL SETUP
11
Once the ‘root’ user email address has been set, the next step is to configure the email settings that the Jupiter Callisto will
use when sending email alerts. To configure email settings, first click on ‘Settings’ in the sidebar, then click on the ‘E-mail’ tab
(see
Figure 3.2b
). Configure the email settings as appropriate for your specific network.
3.3 ACCESSING THE IPMI INTERFACE
The motherboard inside Jupiter Callisto has components that allow for management of the systmem independently of the
power status and OS installed. The IPMI (Intelligent Platform Management Interface) provides access to the motherboard’s
BMC (Baseboard Management Controller), which monitors and manages system sensors, provides remote viewing KVM
services, and allows for power control of the system.
To access the IPMI interface:
1. Connect to your network using the IPMI port on Jupiter Callisto (See
Section 1.5
). The IPMI port is set to DHCP in order
to automatically receive a IP address from the network. These instructions assume that the network being connected to
the IPMI port is serving IP addresses via DHCP.
2. To determine the IPMI address, click on the ‘Network’ tab at the top of the screen in the web interface, then click ‘IPMI’.
3. Enter the address into a web browser to get to the IPMI interface login screen.
4. The default username is ‘ADMIN’ and password is ‘ADMIN’ (capital letters for both).
3.4 DEFAULT SETUP
The Jupiter Callisto system is set up by default in the following configuration.
• Storage:
The storage pool is configured as multiple RAIDZ2 sets of four drives each. 8-bay units consist of two RAIDZ2 sets,
while 16-bay units have four RAIDZ2 sets. One ZFS filesystem (labeled ‘callisto’) has been created from this pool (labeled
‘pool’). See
Section 4, Storage Configuration
, for more information.
• Accounts:
One user has been created, named ‘callisto’ with a password of ‘callisto’. It belongs to the group also named
‘callisto’.
• Shares:
One CIFS (SMB) share named ‘Jupiter Callisto’ has been created. This share has given read/write access to the user
‘callisto’. You can access the share by browsing network drives on a client computer. See
Section 6.2, Connecting to
Shares
, for alternate methods to access a CIFS share.
Figure 3.2b