
The CHAP Authentication feature of this product requires the following acknowledgements:
This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (
). This product
includes software written by Tim Hudson (
).
This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit.
(
).
Intel® PROSet for Windows* Device Manager
Many of the functions of the Intel® iSCSI Boot Port Selection Setup Menu can also be configured or revised
from Windows Device Manager. Open the adapter's property sheet and select the
Data Options
tab. You
must install the latest Intel Ethernet Adapter drivers and software to access this.
iSCSI Boot Target Configuration
For specific information on configuring your iSCSI target system and disk volume, refer to instructions
provided by your system or operating system vendor. Listed below are the basic steps necessary to setup
Intel® Ethernet iSCSI Boot to work with most iSCSI target systems. The specific steps will vary from one
vendor to another.
NOTE:
To support iSCSI Boot, the target needs to support multiple sessions from the same ini-
tiator. Both the iSCSI Boot firmware initiator and the OS High Initiator need to establish an iSCSI
session at the same time. Both these initiators use the same Initiator Name and IP Address to con-
nect and access the OS disk but these two initiators will establish different iSCSI sessions. In order
for the target to support iSCSI Boot, the target must be capable of supporting multiple sessions and
client logins.
1. Configure a disk volume on your iSCSI target system. Note the LUN ID of this volume for use when
configuring in Intel® Ethernet iSCSI Boot firmware setup.
2. Note the iSCSI Qualified Name (IQN) of the iSCSI target, which will likely look like:
iqn.1986-03.com.intel:target1
This value is used as the iSCSI target name when you configuring your initiator system's Intel®
Ethernet iSCSI Boot firmware.
3. Configure the iSCSI target system to accept the iSCSI connection from the iSCSI initiator. This
usually requires listing the initiator's IQN name or MAC address for permitting the initiator to access to
the disk volume. See the
section for information on how to set the iSCSI initiator
name.
4. One-way authentication protocol can optionally be enabled for secure communications. Challenge-
Handshake Authentication Protocol (CHAP) is enabled by configuring username/password on iSCSI
target system. For setting up CHAP on the iSCSI initiator, refer to the section
for
information.
Booting from Targets Larger than 2TB
You can connect and boot from a target LUN that is larger than 2 Terabytes with the following restrictions:
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