The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For the purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product. Learn more about how Cisco is using Inclusive Language.
This chapter contains the following sections:
Cisco UCS Director displays all managed components in each NetApp Cluster Mode (C-Mode) account. These components can be hardware or software.
You can monitor each component and perform tasks such as creating, deleting, and modifying these components. The following components are monitored in a C-Mode account:
Clustered Data ONTAP is the enabler for NetApp scale-out storage configurations. The basic building blocks of a cluster are the familiar NetApp HA pairs in which two storage controllers are interconnected to the same set of disks. If one controller suffers a failure, the other takes over its storage and continues serving data.
In a Data ONTAP cluster, each storage controller is referred to as a cluster node, and nodes are allowed to be of different models and sizes. In a cluster, it is connected to other nodes over a cluster network.
A node is also connected to the disk shelves that provide physical storage for the Data ONTAP Cluster-Mode system or to third-party storage arrays that provide array LUNs for Data ONTAP use.
Disks are grouped together in an aggregate. These aggregates provide storage to the volumes that are associated with the aggregate.
When you click the Disks tab, all the disks that are available in that account are displayed. Choose a disk and click View Details to view the summary details of the disk.
A logical interface (LIF) is an IP address associated with a physical network port; that is, an Ethernet port. In the event of a component failure, a logical interface can failover or be migrated to a different physical port (potentially on other nodes) based on policies interpreted by the LIF manager. A LIF continues to provide network access despite the component failure. You can create multiple LIFs for a single SVM.
Step 1 | Navigate to the Logical Interfaces tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Logical Interfaces tab, see Managing Interface Groups. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
LIF dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Ports are either physical ports (NICs), or virtualized ports, such as interface groups or VLANs. A LIF communicates over the network through the port that it is currently bound to.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the Ports tab. | ||||||||||
Step 4 | Select the row of a port that you want to configure and click Configure Port. | ||||||||||
Step 5 | In the
Configure Port dialog box, complete the following
fields:
| ||||||||||
Step 6 | Click Submit. |
An interface group is a port aggregate that contains two or more physical ports that act as a single trunk port. Expanded capabilities include increased resiliency, increased availability, and load sharing.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Interface Groups tab.
The Interface
Groups created in the account are displayed. The
Interface Groups tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to Interface Groups tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Interface groups tab, see Managing Interface Groups. | ||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
IfGroup dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
VLANs provide logical segmentation of networks by creating separate broadcast domains. A VLAN can span multiple physical network segments.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
vLANs tab.
The VLANs
created in the account are displayed. The
vLANs tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the vLANs tab. For more information about how to navigate to the vLANs tab, see Managing VLANs. | ||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
vLAN dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
An aggregate is made up of one or more RAID groups of disks. Aggregates are used to manage plexes and RAID groups as these entities exist as part of an aggregate. You can increase the usable space in an aggregate by adding disks to existing RAID groups or by adding new RAID groups. Once you have added disks to an aggregate, you cannot remove them to reduce storage space without deleting the aggregate.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Aggregates tab.
The aggregates
available under the account are displayed. The
Aggregates tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Aggregates tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Aggregates tab, see Managing Aggregates. | ||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Aggregate dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Storage Virtual Machine (SVM), formerly known as Vserver, is a secure virtual storage server that supports multiple protocols and unified storage. Each SVM contains data volumes and one or more Logical Interfaces (LIFs) through which it serves data to the clients. SVMs securely isolate the shared virtualized data storage and network and appear as a single dedicated server to the clients. Each SVM has a separate administrator authentication domain and can be managed independently by its SVM administrator.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
SVMs tab.
The SVMs
available under the account are displayed. The
SVMs tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the SVMs tab. For more information about how to navigate to the SVMs tab, see Managing SVMs. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
SVM dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
After creating the SVM, expand the purple drop-down list icon on the right pane and choose View Details to view details about the SVM. You can also set up, modify, and delete CIFS for that SVM.
A volume is a logical file system whose structure is made visible to users when you export the volume to a UNIX host through an NFS mount or to a Windows host through a CIFS share. A volume is the most inclusive of the logical containers. It can store files and directories, qtrees, and LUNs.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the account. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and choose View Details from the purple drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Volumes tab.
The volumes
available in the SVM appear. The
Volumes tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the
Volumes tab.
For more information about how to navigate to the Volumes tab, see the "Managing Volumes in SVM" topic. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Volume dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the C-Mode account. | ||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the purple drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Volume
LIF Association tab.
The LIFs that
are associated with volumes available in the SVM account are displayed. The
Volume
LIF Association tab provides the following actions:
|
A logical unit number (LUN) is used to identify a logical unit, which is a device that is addressed by the SCSI protocol or similar protocols such as Fibre Channel or iSCSI. LUNs are central to the management of block storage arrays shared over a storage area network (SAN).
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
LUNs tab.
The LUNs
available in the SVM are displayed. The
LUNs tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the LUNs tab. For more information about how to navigate to the LUNs tab, see Managing LUNs. | ||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
LUN dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
A Qtree is similar in concept to a partition. It creates a subset of a volume to which a quota can be applied to limit its size. As a special case, a Qtree can be the entire volume. A Qtree is more flexible than a partition because you can change the size of a Qtree at any time.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
QTrees tab.
The Qtrees
available under the account are displayed. The
QTrees tab provides the following actions:
|
A quota limits the amount of disk space and the number of files that a particular user or group can consume. A quota can also restrict the total space and files used in a qtree, or the usage of users and groups within a qtree.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the purple drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Quotas tab.
The quotas
available in the SVM account are displayed. The
Quotas tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Quotas tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Quotas tab, see Managing Quotas. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create Quota. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Quota dialog box, complete the following fields:
|
Initiator groups (igroups) specify which hosts can access specified LUNs on the storage system. Initiator groups are protocol-specific.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Initiator Groups tab.
The initiator
groups available under the account are displayed. The
Initiator Groups tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Initiator Groups tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Initiator Groups tab, see Managing Initiator Groups. | ||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Initiator Group dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Choose the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Initiators tab.
The initiators
available under the account are displayed. The
Initiators tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the
Initiators tab.
For more information about how to navigate to the Initiators tab, see Managing Initiators. | ||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Initiator dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
The CIFS protocol is used with Microsoft operating systems for remote file operations (mapping network drives), browsing (through the network neighborhood icon), authentication (Windows NT and Windows 2000), and remote printer services. The core of native Microsoft networking is built around its CIFS services.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Choose the SVM for which you want to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
CIFS
Shares tab.
The CIFS shares
available in the SVM are displayed. The
CIFS
Shares tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the CIFS Share tab. For more information about how to navigate to the CIFS Share tab, see Managing CIFS Shares. | ||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
CIFS Share dialog box, complete the following fields:
|
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the purple drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||
Step 5 | Click the
DNS tab.
The DNS
configured in the SVM account are displayed. The
DNS tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the purple drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||
Step 5 | Click the
IP
Hostname tab.
The SVM name,
IP address, and hostname in the SVM account are displayed. The
IP
Hostname tab provides the following actions:
|
You can define the Single Instance Storage (SIS) policy to perform SIS operations: compression and/or deduplication. Data compression can be used on-the-fly, and/or as a scheduled background operation. This can be followed by deduplication, which is a method of reducing disk space usage by eliminating duplicate data blocks on a FlexVol volume, where only a single instance of each unique data blocks is stored.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the purple drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
SIS
Policies tab.
The SIS
policies available in the SVM account are displayed. The
SIS
Policies tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the SIS Policies tab. For more information about how to navigate to the SIS Policies tab, see Managing SIS Policy. | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
sis Policy on SVM dialog box, do the following:
| ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
An export policy includes export rules to control client access to volumes. An export policy must exist on SVM for clients to access data. You associate an export policy with each volume to configure client access to the volume.
A single SVM can contain multiple export policies. This enables you to do the following for SVMs with multiple volumes:
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Export
Policies tab.
The export
policies available under the account are displayed. The
Export
Policies tab provides the following actions:
|
You can configure export rules to determine how to handle the client access requests to volumes.
At least one export rule need to be added to an export policy to allow access to clients. If an export policy contains more than one rule, the rules are processed based on rule index. The permissions defined in a rule are applied to the clients that match the client match criteria specified in the export rule.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Export
Rules tab.
The export
rules available under the account are displayed. The
Export
Rules tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Export Rules tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Export Rules tab, see Managing Export Rules. | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Export Rule dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Snapshot
Policies tab.
The snapshot
policies available under the account are displayed. The
Snapshot
Policies tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Snapshot Policies tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Snapshot Policies tab, see Managing Snapshot Policies. | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Snapshot Policy
dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
A port set consists of a group of Fibre Channel (FC) target ports. You bind a port set to an igroup, to make the LUN available only on a subset of the storage system's target ports. Any host in the igroup can access the LUNs only by connecting to the target ports in the port set.
If an igroup is not bound to a port set, the LUNs mapped to the igroup are available on all of the storage system FC target ports. The igroup controls which initiators LUNs are exported to. The port set limits the target ports on which those initiators have access.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
Portsets tab.
The port sets
available under the account are displayed. The
Portsets tab provides the following actions:
|
A World Wide Port Names (WWPN) is a unique, 64-bit identifier displayed as a 16-character hexadecimal value in Data ONTAP. However, SAN Administrators may find it easier to identify FC ports using an alias instead, especially in larger SANs. You can create multiple aliases for a WWPN, but you cannot use the same alias for multiple WWPNs.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the SVMs tab. | ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click the SVM for which you wish to view details and click View Details from the drop-down list on the right pane. | ||||||||||||||
Step 5 | Click the
WWPN
Aliases tab.
The WWPN
aliases available under the account are displayed. The
WWPN
Aliases tab provides the following actions:
|
Fibre Channel (FC) is a licensed service on the storage system that enables you to export logical units (LUNs) and transfer block data to hosts using the Small Computer System Interface (SCSI) protocol over a Fibre Channel fabric.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
FCP
Services tab.
The FCP
services created in the account are displayed. The
FCP
Services tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the FCP Services tab. For more information about how to navigate to the FCP Services tab, see Managing FCP Services. | ||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
FCP Service dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
SVM
Peer tab.
The SVM peers
that are available under the account are displayed. The
SVM
Peer tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||
Step 3 | Click the Cluster Peer tab. | ||||||
Step 4 | Click Create. | ||||||
Step 5 | In the
Create
Cluster Peer Relationship dialog box, complete the following
fields:
| ||||||
Step 6 | Click Submit. |
SnapMirror software is a disaster recovery and data distribution solution, whereas SnapVault is a backup solution that is exclusively used to archive data. SnapMirror mirrors data to one or more network filers at high speed over LAN or WAN connections. If a disaster occurs, the destination volume can be made as source (reverse Snapmirror). SnapVault is a collection of snapshot copies of the primary volume, which can be restored with minimal downtime when there is data loss or when a system is corrupted.
Both the SnapMirror and SnapVault relationships can be managed through the SnapMirrors tab. The SnapMirrors tab displays both the Snapmirror and SnapVault data, with the relationship type column differentiating the data.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
SnapMirrors tab.
Cisco UCS Director
displays all the SnapMirror and SnapVault relationships created in the account.
The SnapMirrors tab provides the following actions:
|
You must create a SVM peer to create a intra-cluster SnapMirror relationship. If you want to establish an inter-cluster SnapMirror relationship, you must create a cluster peer and a server peer.
Step 1 | Navigate to the SnapMirrors tab. For more information about how to navigate to the SnapMirrors tab, see . | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
SnapMirror Relationship dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
SnapMirrors Policies tab.
Cisco UCS Director
displays all the SnapMirror policies created in the account. The
SnapMirror Policies tab provides the following
actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the SnapMirror Policies tab. For more information about how to navigate to the SnapMirror Policies tab, see Managing SnapMirror Policies. | ||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
SnapMirror Policy dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Snapshot
Policies tab.
The snapshot
policies available under the account are displayed. The
Snapshot
Policies tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Snapshot Policies tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Snapshot Policies tab, see Managing Snapshot Policies. | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Snapshot Policy
dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Jobs tab.
The jobs
scheduled under the account are displayed. The
Jobs tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Cron Job
Schedules tab.
The cron jobs
scheduled under the account are displayed. The
Cron Job
Schedules tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the Cron Job Schedules tab. For more information about how to navigate to the Cron Job Schedules tab, see Managing Cron Job Schedules. | ||||||||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
Cron Job Schedule dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||||||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
NFS
Services tab.
The network
file system (NFS) services available under the account are displayed. The
NFS
Services tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | Navigate to the NFS Services tab. For more information about how to navigate to the NFS Services tab, see Managing NFS Services. | ||||||||
Step 2 | Click Create. | ||||||||
Step 3 | In the
Create
NFS Service dialog box, complete the following fields:
| ||||||||
Step 4 | Click Submit. |
A multi-node setup improves scalability by offloading the processing of system tasks, such as inventory data collection, from the primary node to one or more service nodes. You can assign certain system tasks to one or more service nodes. The number of nodes determines how the processing of system tasks are scaled.
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . |
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. |
Step 3 | Click the
System
Tasks tab.
The tasks that are defined for the account is displayed. For more information about how to manage system tasks, see the Cisco UCS Director Administration Guide. |
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Routing
Group Routes tab.
The routing
group routes set under the account are displayed. The
Routing
Group Routes tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . | ||||||||
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. | ||||||||
Step 3 | Click the
Licenses tab.
The Licenses
available under the account are displayed. The
Licenses tab provides the following actions:
|
Step 1 | On the menu bar, choose . |
Step 2 | In the left pane, choose the pod that includes the NetApp C-Mode account and select the NetApp C-Mode account. |
Step 3 | Click the Licenses tab. The licenses available under the account are displayed. |
Step 4 | Click Add. |
Step 5 | In the Add License to Cluster dialog box, enter a license code in the License Code field. |
Step 6 | Click Submit. |