b.Enter the following at the command prompt to stop the management server:

/etc/init.d/appstormanager stop

c.To start the management server, enter the following at the command prompt:

/etc/init.d/appstormanager start

2.Login as the designated administrator account you specified in Step 1 — Configure the Management Server to Use AD or LDAP” on page 157.

For example, the user name would be the following:

AD — domain\PrimaryUser

LDAP — PrimaryUser

where PrimaryUser is the name of the user account in LDAP or is the designated primary user in AD.

The password would be the following: [NTdomainpassword].

Step 3 — Add Users to the Management Server

Once the management server is configured for Active Directory/LDAP, the users can be added to the management server. This is required to prevent accidental access to the management server from other AD/LDAP users. Until the user is authenticated against AD/LDAP, the management server views the user as an internal user, whose password can be changed within the management server.

Once a user is authenticated against AD/LDAP, the user is tagged as an external user and the user’s password must be managed through AD/LDAP.

To add a user to the management server:

1.Log onto the management server by using the designated Admin account specified in Step 1 — Configure the Management Server to Use AD or LDAP” on page 157.

2.Create the users as described in Adding Users” on page 144 observing the following rules:

AD: Prefix the user name with the domain name, for example: domain\newuser.

The user names you create by using the management server must match the user names in AD/LDAP.

It is not necessary to create a password, since the passwords used for login are those already configured on either the AD or LDAP server.

Step 4 — Provide Login Information to Your Users

Notify your users that they are now able to log into the management server, and provide them with the user name and password you have specified in Active Directory/LDAP

IMPORTANT: Remind your users not to give the password they use to access the management server to anyone. Since user credentials are now stored in AD/LDAP, the password used to access the management server may also be used to access other accounts. In some instances, it may even be their network user name and password.

HP Storage Essentials SRM 6.0 User Guide 165