A Managing The Emu; Cli Reference; Command Line Conventions; Operational Groups - HP X5000 G2 Administrator's Manual

Hp network storage system
Table of Contents

Advertisement

A Managing the EMU

This chapter describes how to manage the EMU using the CLI or the Enclosure Manager physical
interface.

CLI reference

The CLI is the primary interface for managing the Enclosure Manager and is accessed via secure
shell protocol over the LAN. Using the CLI is necessary for functions not possible through any other
mechanism or interface. For example, creating and setting Enclosure Manager user accounts and
passwords and remotely powering the enclosure ON or OFF can be done only with the CLI.

Command line conventions

CLI input is case-insensitive except when otherwise noted. Commands are organized into a tree,
with approximately 30 base commands. Each of these commands can have any number of
subcommands. Subcommands can also have further subcommands. Each command used in this
appendix follows the conventions listed in
Table 16 Command line conventions
Symbol
< >
|
{ }
[ ]
" "
NOTE:
All users logged into the CLI have administrator privilege. When a user account is created,
the account has administrator privilege.

Operational groups

Descriptions of the CLI commands are organized by operational group instead of the parser
implementation which is a tree of commands, subcommands, and sub-subcommands. The operational
groups are:
Authentication—user identity and authentication
Time functions—Real Time Clock/Calendar control
Role definition—access control
Inventory and status—self explanatory
Internet control—internal and external LAN management
Server management—iLO dependent control of server
Enclosure control—global control of enclosure, excluding JBOD management zone
Forensic—global diagnostic context functions (not directed validation tests)
Session—CLI session control
Table 16 (page
131).
Description
Denotes a variable must be substituted with a value, such
as a user name. Do not include the < > symbols when
entering the variable.
Used to separate input options.
Denotes a list of mandatory choices that must be made.
For example, SET ENCLOSURE UID {ON | OFF} must
be in one of the following forms:
SET ENCLOSURE UID ON
SET ENCLOSURE UID OFF
Denotes an optional argument or set of characters.
Used to enclose command arguments that contain spaces.
CLI reference
131

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents