iSCSI Protocol: Broadcom NetXtreme II Network Adapter User Guide
file:///T|/htdocs/NETWORK/BroadCom/71921/NetXtremeII/en/iscsi.htm[9/26/2012 3:29:03 PM]
following using the values used when configuring the iSCSI target:
IP Address
TCP Port
Boot LUN
iSCSI Name
8. Select
ESC
to return to the
Main
menu.
9. A second iSCSI boot adapter can be configured for redundancy in the event the primary adapter fails to boot. To
configure the secondary device parameters, select
Secondary Device Parameters
from the
Main
menu (see
Configure Parameters for a Secondary Adapter
). Otherwise, go to step 10.
10. Select
ESC
and select
Exit and Save Configuration
.
11. Select
F4
to save your MBA configuration.
Dynamic iSCSI Boot Configuration
In a dynamic configuration, you only need to specify that the system's IP address and target/initiator information are
provided by a DHCP server (see IPv4 and IPv6 configurations in
Configuring the DHCP Server to Support iSCSI Boot
). For
IPv4, with the exception of the initiator iSCSI name, any settings on the Initiator Parameters, 1st Target Parameters, or 2nd
Target Parameters screens are ignored and do not need to be cleared. For IPv6, with the exception of the CHAP ID and
Secret, any settings on the Initiator Parameters, 1st Target Parameters, or 2nd Target Parameters screens are ignored and do
not need to be cleared. For information on configuration options, see
Table 1
.
NOTE: When using a DHCP server, the DNS server entries are overwritten by the values provided by the DHCP server.
This occurs even if the locally provided values are valid and the DHCP server provides no DNS server information. When the
DHCP server provides no DNS server information, both the primary and secondary DNS server values are set to 0.0.0.0. When
the Windows OS takes over, the Microsoft iSCSI initiator retrieves the iSCSI Initiator parameters and configures the
appropriate registries statically. It will overwrite whatever is configured. Since the DHCP daemon runs in the Windows
environment as a user process, all TCP/IP parameters have to be statically configured before the stack comes up in the iSCSI
Boot environment.
If DHCP Option 17 is used, the target information is provided by the DHCP server, and the initiator iSCSI name is retrieved
from the value programmed from the Initiator Parameters screen. If no value was selected, then the controller defaults to the
name:
iqn.1995-05.com.broadcom.<11.22.33.44.55.66>.iscsiboot
where the string
11.22.33.44.55.66
corresponds to the controller's MAC address.
If DHCP option 43 (IPv4 only) is used, then any settings on the Initiator Parameters, 1st Target Parameters, or 2nd Target
Parameters screens are ignored and do not need to be cleared.
To configure the iSCSI boot parameters using dynamic configuration
1. From the
General Parameters Menu
screen, set the following:
TCP/IP parameters via DHCP
: Enabled. (For IPv4.)
IP Autoconfiguration
: Enabled. (For IPv6, non-offload.)
iSCSI parameters via DHCP
: Enabled
CHAP Authentication
: Disabled
Boot to iSCSI target
: Disabled
DHCP Vendor ID
: BRCM ISAN
Link Up Delay Time
: 0
Use TCP Timestamp
: Enabled (for some targets such as the Dell/EMC AX100i, it is necessary to enable
Use
TCP Timestamp)
Target as First HDD
: Disabled
LUN Busy Retry Count
: 0
IP Version
: IPv6. (For IPv6, non-offload.)
HBA Boot Mode
: Disabled
2. Select
ESC
to return to the
Main
menu.