Hp System Management Homepage Session Time-Out Error; Hp Sas Integrated Raid (Ir) Configuration Utility May Cause Kernel Panics On Rhel4U7; Flashing Hp Pcie 2-Port 1000Base-T Adapter (Ad337A) Adapters - HP BL860c User Manual

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3.
Reboot the server.

HP System Management Homepage Session Time-out Error

The default value of the ui-timeout option in the HP SMH is 20 seconds. For servers with
numerous devices, 80 CPUs for example, the home or device pages may take more than 20
seconds to load and you may encounter a timeout message in your browser. You can avoid this
by setting the value of ui-timeout to the maximum of 80 seconds, using one of the following
methods:
NOTE:
The maximum value for ui-timeout is 3600 seconds.
From the command line:
From HP SMH :
HP SAS Integrated Raid (IR) Configuration Utility May Cause Kernel Panics
on RHEL4U7
The Integrated Raid (IR) Configuration Utility, cfggen, is a Linux command line utility that
configures the IR functionality of the HP Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) controllers that are used in
LSI-1068-based HP SAS controllers. The cfggen utility causes kernel panics when creating
volumes with RHEL4U7.
This issue has been fixed by MPT driver, 3.12.14.00. If you want to use cfggen on RHEL4U7,
first install the proper MPT driver. You can also use the EFI executable utility,cfggen.efi, to
create volumes.
For information about using the cfggen.efi utility, see the SmartSetup Scripting Toolkit
Deployment Guide:
http://www.docs.hp.com/en/5991-6250/

Flashing HP PCIe 2-port 1000Base-T adapter (AD337A) Adapters

The HP PCIe 2-port 1000Base-T adapter (AD337A) with the 3.0.48 firmware version cannot be
flashed using HP Smart Setup.
60
Known Issues
label=HP
#Corresponds to kernel 2.6.18-92.el5xen
initrd=HP-initrd-2.6.18-92.el5xen.img
read-only
root=/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00
append="-- rhgb quiet"
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Set ui-timeout to 80 seconds:
# /opt/hp/hpsmh/sbin/smhconfig
--ui-timeout=80
Restart HP SMH:
# /etc/init.d/hpsmhd restart
Sign in to HP SMH.
Select Settings SMH Security Timeouts.
Modify the UI timeout (seconds) value, and then click
Apply.
Sign out of HP SMH.
Restart HP SMH:
# /etc/init.d/hpsmhd restart

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