HP Distributed Cloud Networking manual HP VSC System and Protocol Configuration

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After rebooting, the IP management interface for the HP VSC is configured along with DNS.

HP VSC System and Protocol Configuration

In addition to the (“out-of-band”) Management IP interface, the HP VSC has an (“in-band”) network interface for the data center’s data network.

In order to utilize the in-band network interface and provide connectivity with the other VSP elements, the HP VSC requires some additional system-level configuration as well as in-band data network configuration.

The system-level configuration required includes:

Assigning a system name.

Defining NTP servers to be used by the system.

Configuring the system time zone.

Configuring the XMPP client and OpenFlow in the HP VSC. Configuring the IP interfaces and network protocols:

Creating the in-band IP interface and assigning an IP address (interface name control and IP address 10.9.0.7/24 in the example configuration below).

Creating a system loopback IP interface for use by network protocols (interface name system and IP address 10.0.0.7/32 in the example configuration below).

Configure network protocols, for example, OSPF, IS-IS and BGP.

The sections below describe the configuration required by highlighting the relevant commands of a HP VSC configuration file. The HP VSC configuration file contains the CLI commands where the commands are formatted for enhanced readability.

After configuration, use the following command to save the configuration:

vsc# admin save

System-level HP VSC Configuration

Information on the XMPP server and OpenFlow commands on the VRS can be found in the current HP Distributed Cloud Networking User Guide.

System Name

The config>system>name command is used to configure the system name. In the excerpt below, the system name is set to NSC-vPE-1.

#--------------------------------------------------

echo "System Configuration"

#--------------------------------------------------

exit all configure

system

name "NSC-vPE-1"

HP VSC Basic Configuration

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Contents HP Distributed Cloud Networking 3.0.R2 Installation Guide Warranty Table of Contents HP VRS and VRS-G Software Installation Documentation feedback Appendix Emulated Ethernet NIC Notes Audience About This GuideHP DCN Overview HP DCN Overview and InfrastructureHP Virtualized Services Directory HP DCN Infrastructure Requirements and Recommendations HP DCN Installation OverviewInstallation Setup HP VSD Hardware and Software Requirements HP DCN Software InstallationHP VSD Installation Overview Installation TypesReinstalling HP VSD Installation MethodsTo change the root password, on each node, run HP VSD Installation Using QCow2 ImageSet Up Appliance VMs Verify the appliance VMs are running Connect to Appliance VMsPing the gateway in this example, 192.168.100.1. ping Configure NetworkingConfigure DNS Server Verify the DNS reverse named file records as follows Set up forward DNS records as followsInstall HP VSD using qcow2 Configure NTP ServerInstall VSD on Node HP VSD Installation Using ISO Disc ImageSet Up VM for ISO Extract and Mount ISO Image Configure Networking, DNS, and NTPInstall HP VSD Using ISO Xmpp Import Certificates on the ServersLdap Store Example of Load Balancer ConfigurationIf you are using an Ldap store, see Using an Ldap Store HP VSC Software Installation Procedure on KVM HP VSC Software InstallationHP VSC Installation Notes For legacy two disk deployment use Copy HP VSC disks for libvirt accessFor single disk deployment use Emulated Disks Notes Emulated Ethernet NIC Notes HP VSC Software Installation Procedure on VMwareInstalling HP VSC on Esxi Using OVA HP VSC Software Installation Procedure on VMware HP VSC Software Installation HP VSC Software Installation Procedure on VMware HP VSC Update HP VSC configuration and rebootHP VSC Boot Options File Configuration HP VSC Basic ConfigurationSistency file .ndx which will preserve system Dns‐domain dns‐name no dns‐domain To check connectivity To enable index persistence, the command isSystem-level HP VSC Configuration HP VSC System and Protocol ConfigurationNTP Servers and Time Zone In-band and Loopback IP Interfaces HP VSC Software Installation Post-install Security Tasks TCP Tftp Preparing the Hypervisor HP VRS and VRS-G Software InstallationVRS and VRS-G Installation Overview This section contains Installing the VRS or VRS-G SoftwareInstall dependencies for Rhel VRS on RhelIf you have modified /etc/default/openvswitch, restart Install the VRS package for RhelVRS on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS with Ubuntu 12.04 Cloud Packages RebootInstall dependencies Install the following packages using dpkgThis section contains the following subsections Installing the VRS Kernel Module for Mpls over GRERestart the VRS service VRS-G on Rhel or UbuntuTo verify which kernel is currently running Installing VRS Kernel Module On RhelInstall dependencies for Dkms Reboot to pick up correct kernelVerify that the VRS processes restart correctly Configuring and Running VRS or VRS-GInstalling VRS Kernel Module On Ubuntu To customize, use scripts that you run after bootupPrerequisites Creating the dVSwitchVMware VRS VM Deployment IntroductionVSwitch1 Verifying the Creation of the dVSwitchVSphere vSwitch Configurations VSwitch0Verifying Deployment Deployment of dVRSInformation Needed Additional Verification Deployment of dVRSClean Install on XenServer VRS Installation on Citrix XenServerIntroduction Block Remove stock openvswitchInstall in the following order Ensue, with the following errorVerification InstallationReboot XenServer Gives hpManagedNetworks Uuid = HPNetUUID Upgrade Existing dVRS Installation on XenServerEnsure that the xenmon to OVS socket is up Verify HPManagedNetwork is created Ensure that all packages are installedRoot 15072 0.0 0.0 4032 772 hvc0 + 1545 Standby Controller Running and Configuring VRSSpecifying the Active and Standby HP VSCs Active ContollerVRS Installation on Citrix XenServer Gather information before contacting an authorized support How to contact HPSoftware technical support and software updates Support and Other ResourcesRelated information Related information Support and Other Resources Documentation feedback Appendix Emulated Ethernet NIC Notes Modify the eth0 configurationEdit or create the br0 configuration