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Before creating a VLAN device, make sure that the hosting VLAN-capable physical LAN device is connected to a VLAN-capable switch. Also make sure that the selected switch port is configured to handle VLAN-tagged traffic.
The following sections contain additional VLAN management details.
3.21.2.1 Probing a Switch Port
To make it easier to manage VLAN devices, OpenVMS LAN includes limited support for IEEE 802.1Q management functions. A LANCP qualifier helps you probe a switch port and list VLAN configuration information. The new command is the following:
LANCP> SHOW DEVICE PHYSICAL-LAN-DEVICE/VLAN |
After you enter the command, LANCP listens for IEEE 802.1Q GVRP (Generic Attribute Registration Protocol) VLAN Registration Protocol packets and displays the following:
For example:
LANCP> SHOW DEVICE LLB /VLAN Listening for VLAN configuration on LLBO ...... VLAN tag 190 configured as VLB VLAN tag 206 configured as VLJ VLAN tag 207 not configured |
This command shows VLAN information only if GVRP capability is enabled
on the switch port.
3.21.2.2 Creating a VLAN Device
To create a VLAN device, enter a LANCP command using the following format:
LANCP> SET DEVICE VLc/VLAN_DEVICE=PHYSICAL-LAN-DEVICE/ TAG=value |
where:
For example:
LANCP> SET DEVICE VLA/VLAN=EIB/TAG=42 |
This command fails if the physical LAN device does not exist, if the physical LAN device is not VLAN-capable, or if the VLAN tag is invalid.
Associating a Text Description with a LAN Device
Also new in this version of OpenVMS, you can associate a text description with a LAN device. You do this by entering a LANCP SET or DEFINE DEVICE command with the qualifier /DESCRIPTION=<quoted-string> to provide the additional context. For example, to identify a VLAN device as part of the "Finance VLAN", enter the following command:
LANCP> SET DEVICE VLA/DESCRIPTION="Finance VLAN" |
The deactivation functionality has not yet been completed at the time of Field Test. Watch for updates during Field Test for this capability. |
To deactivate a VLAN device, use the following command format:
LANCP> SET DEVICE VLc/NOVLAN |
This command fails if the device is in use, that is, if other
applications are still using the device.
3.21.2.4 Displaying VLAN Device Information
To display information about the VLAN device, enter the LANCP commands SHOW DEVICE and SHOW CONFIGURATION. For example:
LANCP> SHOW DEVICE VLK/CHARACTERISTICS Device Characteristics VLKO: Value Characteristic _____ ______________ ... "206" VLAN 802.1Q tag "1" VLAN device flags "Procurve 2315 P15" VLAN description Link Up Link state |
Device Parent Medium/User Version Link Speed Duplex Size MAC Address Current Address Type ------ ------ ----------- ------- ---- ----- ------ ---- ----------------- ----------------- ---- EWA0 Ethernet X-51 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-D0-59-61-72-F3 AA-00-04-00-1B-4D UTP DEGXA-TA EWB0 Ethernet X-51 Up 100 Full 1500 00-D0-59-61-72-D8 00-D0-59-61-72-D8 UTP DEGXA-TA EWC0 Ethernet X-59 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-60-CF-21-71-9C AA-00-00-21-71-9C UTP DEGPA-TA EWD0 Ethernet X-59 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-60-CF-20-9A-C6 00-60-CF-20-9A-C6 UTP DEGPA-TA EIA0 Ethernet X-16 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-12-79-9E-20-AE AA-00-04-00-1B-4D UTP AB352A EIB0 Ethernet X-16 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-12-79-9E-20-AF 00-12-79-9E-20-AF UTP AB352A LLB0 Ethernet X-19 Up 1000 Full 1500 AA-00-00-21-71-9C AA-00-00-21-71-9C DEGPA-TA VLB0 Ethernet X-BA1 Up 1000 Full 1500 AA-00-00-21-71-9C AA-00-00-21-71-9C LLB VLC0 Ethernet X-BA1 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-12-79-9E-20-AF 00-12-79-9E-20-AF UTP EIB VLD0 Ethernet X-BA1 Down 100 Full 1500 00-00-00-00-00-00 00-00-00-00-00-00 VLJ0 Ethernet X-BA1 Up 1000 Full 1500 AA-00-00-21-71-9C AA-00-00-21-71-9C LLB VLK0 Ethernet X-BA1 Up 1000 Full 1500 00-12-79-9E-20-AE AA-00-04-00-1B-4D UTP EIA |
Most VLAN problems are related to configuration. A list of things to check when you are troubleshooting a VLAN problem:
$ ANALYZE/SYSTEM SDA> SHOW LAN/DEVICE=physical-device-name or SDA> LAN DEVICE/DEVICE=physical-device-name |
LANCP> SHOW DEVICE physical-device-name/VLAN |
LANCP> SHOW DEVICE vlan-device-name/INTERNAL_COUNTERS |
LANCP> SHOW DEVICE VLC/INTERNAL_COUNTERS Device Internal Counters VLCO: Value Counter _____ _______ --- Internal Driver Counters --- " EIB" Device name 00000001 Device Flag 1 <online> 190 VLAN Tag ID 86514000 Physical LSB 11834 Failure status FFFFFFFF 805E28CC Failure PC |
$ ANALYZE/SYSTEM SDA> LAN DEVICE/ADDRESS=physical LSB address |
For more information about OpenVMS VLAN support, see the HP OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference Manual.
3.22 Volume Shadowing for OpenVMS
The following new features for HP Volume Shadowing for OpenVMS are available in OpenVMS Version 8.3:
Automatic bitmap creation on volume processing means that an existing HBMM bitmap is made available to function as a minicopy bitmap when connectivity to one or more shadow set members is lost and is not restored during the shadow member timeout period.
When such connectivity is lost, the shadow set is paused for volume processing---that is, writes and reads are temporarily suspended until connectivity is restored or the timeout period (established by the value of SHADOW_MBR_TMO) expires, whichever comes first.
If connectivity is not restored by the end of the timeout period, the member or members are expelled from the shadow set, read and write I/O to the remaining member or members resumes, and the bitmap keeps track of the writes. The bitmap, whose name has changed from HBMMx to rrsex, functions as a minicopy bitmap for the member or members that were expelled.
While one or two members are expelled and after all members are restored to membership in the shadow set, the HBMM bitmap functionality remains in effect. The HBMM bitmap functionality is useful in the case of an expelled member only when the shadow set has three members and one member is expelled. |
When connectivity is restored to one of the expelled shadow set members, you can mount it back into the shadow set. If the expelled member's metadata matches a bitmap that exists, it is used for a minicopy operation to restore that member to the shadow set. If a second shadow set member was removed at the same time, that member can also use that bitmap. After the members are restored to the shadow set, the name of the bitmap reverts to its HBMM bitmap name.
The reasons to minimize the time when one or more members are expelled from a shadow set are:
Before the introduction of automatic bitmap creation on volume processing, returning expelled members to a shadow set, after connectivity was restored, was a lengthy process. The expelled members could be returned only by undergoing a full copy. The availability of a bitmap enables the use of a minicopy operation, which takes considerably less time than a full copy operation.
To enable automatic bitmap creation on volume processing, you need to
establish an HBMM policy for the shadow sets, and include the new
MULTIUSE keyword in the policy. For more information, refer to the HBMM
chapter in the HP OpenVMS Version 8.2 New Features and Documentation Overview manual.
3.22.2 New SET SHADOW /RESET Qualifier
The /RESET qualifier to the SET SHADOW command is introduced in this release. SET SHADOW/RESET=COUNTERS resets the shadowing-specific counters that are maintained for each shadow set.
The counters that are reset to 0 are:
HBMM Reset Count
Copy Hotblocks
Copy Collisions
SCP Merge Repair Cnt
APP Merge Repair Cnt
You can display the current settings of these counters using the SHOW SHADOW command.
The HBMM Reset Count refers to how many times the RESET_THRESHOLD value was met. The RESET_THRESHOLD is the setting which determines how frequently a bitmap is cleared. With the ability to clear the HBMM Reset Count, system managers can better gauge the rate of threshold resets.
For a complete description of SET SHADOW/RESET, refer to the HP OpenVMS DCL Dictionary: N--Z and DCL Help.
This chapter describes the creation (or mastering) of CD or DVD media on OpenVMS.
The process of mastering CD or DVD media includes the following tasks:
On OpenVMS, you must use a logical disk (LD) device as the staging area
and DCL commands such as INITIALIZE, MOUNT, COPY, and BACKUP to
generate and populate the disk volume in the staging area. You can then
copy the contents of the disk volume by using the COPY/RECORDABLE_MEDIA
command.
4.1 LD, CD, and DVD Device Concepts
The following sections discuss concepts that pertain to mastering
optical media on OpenVMS.
4.1.1 Logical Disk Devices
A logical disk (LD) device provides a mechanism for staging the master copy of the data to be written to the optical media. You can create the source for the recording operation using an LD disk device and then enter the COPY/RECORDABLE_MEDIA command to transfer the master onto the optical media.
You use the LD utility to create and manage LD disk devices. You can then initialize, mount, and access these LD disk devices using standard OpenVMS DCL commands.
For more information about LD disk devices, see the HP OpenVMS System Manager's Manual.
4.1.2 CD and DVD Devices
You can use various recording formats with optical media devices. In general, OpenVMS can read formats that correspond to the target device you use.
OpenVMS can record the following four media formats:
Format | Description |
---|---|
CD-R | Compact Disc Recordable |
CD-RW | Compact Disc Rewritable |
DVD+R | Digital Versatile Disc Recordable |
DVD+RW | Digital Versatile Disc Rewritable |
The particular characteristics and capabilities of the target CD and DVD devices are specific to the system, the recording device, and the recording media. For example, the local hardware and software configuration can further restrict the maximum permissible CD recording speed to a value less than the speed supported by the CD recording device. You might attempt to record a CD from an OpenVMS system that does not have the I/O bandwidth you need to keep the data cache of the target CD device from underflowing. However, such attempts can result in recording errors and failures, and can waste recording media.
Recording devices can support a variety of recording formats and media. Conversely, OpenVMS or a particular device might not support a particular recording format. For the currently supported device hardware and their associated platform configurations, see the following Web site:
Find your particular I64 or Alpha platform, and then look for the
support matrix for that platform.
4.2 General Steps for Mastering Data Disks
The steps for mastering (sometimes called recording or burning) optical media are the following:
$ @SYS$STARTUP:LD$STARTUP.COM |
LD$STARTUP requires the TMPMBX, NETMBX, and SYSLCK privileges. The COPY/RECORDABLE_MEDIA command, used later in these steps, is installed with the necessary privileges. |
Media | Maximum Blocks | Capacity |
---|---|---|
CD-R | 1,200,000 blocks | 600 MB/s |
CD-RW | 1,400,000 blocks | 700 MB/s |
Single-layer DVD+R | 9,180,416 blocks | 4.6 GB/s |
Single-layer DVD+RW | 9,180,416 blocks | 4.6 GB/s |
$ LD CREATE /size=9180416 filespec.ISO |
$ LD CONNECT filespec.ISO LDA1: |
$ INITIALIZE LDA1: volume-label - /SYSTEM [/ERASE] [/...] - [/CLUSTER=n] [/STRUCTURE=n] [/...] $ MOUNT LDA1: volume-label |
$ DISMOUNT LDA1: |
$ COPY/RECORDABLE_MEDIA LDA1: DQA0: - _$ [/FORMAT][/BELL][/SPEED=speed][/VERIFY] |
$ LD DISCONNECT LDA1: $ DELETE filespec.ISO;* |
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