HP Hewlett Packard Network Card HP c7000 User Manual

HP BladeSystem specification for a c-Class provisioning  
server blade  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Executive summary  
This document specifies the design of an HP BladeSystem c-Class server blade that serves as a  
Microsoft® Windows® infrastructure server for provisioning line-of-business applications such as web  
servers, mail servers, database servers and other mission-critical applications. This specification  
outlines the use of this server blade design in several different scenarios as a modular component of a  
Windows infrastructure in support of line-of-business application deployment. This specification  
assumes a minimum level of Windows infrastructure support that includes DNS, DHCP and domain  
and directory services. The specification adheres to Microsoft Windows Server System Reference  
Architectural best practices and is intended to be used as a component of an HP Adaptive  
Infrastructure.  
Target audience: The intended audience is a solutions architect and/or technical consultant requiring  
an understanding of automated provisioning of service/application/management updates using HP  
ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack on Industry Standard HP ProLiant servers.  
Why server blades for the provisioning server?  
Lower total cost of ownership (TCO)  
Although the provisioning server is specific to c-Class blades, it is not restricted to them. The  
provisioning server can be deployed on HP p-Class blades and ProLiant DL, and ML lines of servers.  
However, there are distinct advantages to using c-Class blades over traditional rack mounted servers.  
The total cost of ownership (TCO) analysis favors blades with respect to capital expenditures (each  
additional blade purchase lowers total cost compared to its alternatives) and operating expenses  
(requires less power and cooling, and less administrative staff). c-Class blades are ideal for large  
scale deployment of blades where operating expenses are an issue. With the c-Class blade  
enclosure’s shared backplane, you can take advantage of the economies of scale not found with  
traditional rack mounted servers. With the integrated shared backplane, you won’t need to buy  
additional network cards, cables, switches and supporting devices for each additional server blade  
purchase. The c-Class blades are optimized for future growth.  
Ease of manageability  
With the HP c-Class Onboard Administrator (OA), managing multiple server blades has never been  
easier. The OA provides a single point from which to perform basic management tasks on blades or  
switches within the enclosure. The OA performs initial configuration steps for the enclosure, allows for  
run-time management and configuration of the enclosure components, and informs you of problems  
within the enclosure through e-mail, SNMP, or the enclosure’s Insight Display.  
HP StorageWorks SB40c storage blade  
Another reason for deploying c-Class blades for the provisioning server is the availability of industry’s  
first storage blade from HP. Because the provisioning server can host numerous images locally on the  
server blade, the SB40c storage blade from HP is an ideal solution. The SB40c consist of 6 disk  
drives with an internal raid controller that sits next to a BladeSystem server providing up to 876  
gigabytes of direct attached storage (DAS) capacity to each blade within an HP BladeSystem c-Class  
enclosure.  
3
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Figure 1. HP StorageWorks SB40c storage blade  
Purpose of the provisioning server blade  
The main purpose of the provisioning server blade is to provide the following service(s):  
Installation and deployment of applications to easily facilitate the management of your network in  
today’s environment with the least amount of effort  
Automate provisioning of service/application/management updates using HP ProLiant Essentials  
Rapid Deployment Pack (RDP) on Industry Standard HP ProLiant servers  
Reduce the number of errors that may occur during manual installation or deployment processes  
Provide for the capture and storage of the newly deployed server’s configuration  
Provide DHCP/PXE/Database/File server (depending on your existing infrastructure)  
The server blade may or may not provide a DHCP/PXE/Database/File server infrastructure for the HP  
BladeSystem enclosure, depending on your existing network. These services may already exist within  
your infrastructure, in which case the provisioning server blade would rely on their services. This  
server blade specification does not address the scaling out of any of these services onto multiple  
server blades. These services can be consolidated onto a single server blade or deployed on other  
servers or server blades and turned off on the provisioning server blade. This specification is an  
example of consolidating these services and, as such, does not focus on hosting any one of these  
services for larger deployment scenarios where isolating a service for performance reasons would be  
required.  
If any one of these services’ CPU, memory or disk requirements exceeds the capacity of the  
provisioning server blade configuration, then the service should be dedicated to a server that can  
meet and exceed those requirements. HP recommends a proof of concept deployment to determine  
exact solution and deployment details to meet the specific business need.  
4
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
What is automated provisioning / RDP?  
Automated provisioning  
So what exactly is the automated provisioning of software and hardware? It means little or no human  
intervention. In other words, the process of installation or deployment is laid out for administrators in  
the form of images, scripts, or batch files. The only requirement is for the administrator to power on  
the server, perhaps execute a couple of scripts or batch files, and/or respond to a minimal number of  
prompts for configuration information. The process is fully automated so that there are no chances of  
data-entry errors or choosing wrong options that could render your application inoperable.  
The technology that can achieve this level of automation is the ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment  
Pack (RDP). RDP is a new generation of server deployment software. The software contains Altiris  
Deployment Solution integrated with the HP SmartStart Scripting Toolkit that manages the server  
deployment via a central console and provides imaging or scripting for server and application  
deployment.  
In short, you configure the server the way it should be configured: capture an image of the server,  
then deploy or re-deploy the image onto servers as many times as necessary with the same results  
each and every time. This provides the consistency offered by the use of RDP. The key benefit is that it  
gives IT administrators the ability to easily deploy servers in an unattended, automated fashion. More  
general benefits include improved overall consistency of configurations across servers and reduced IT  
resource requirements during server deployments.  
For more detailed information on ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack (RDP), see the following:  
ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack (RDP) home page: http://www.hp.com/go/rdp  
Figure 2. ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack  
5
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
RDP and its underlying technologies  
Understanding the technologies behind RDP is necessary for proper implementation of HP server  
blade deployment. These include: DHCP, PXE, Bootworks, and AClient.  
Figure 3. RDP / PXE Technology  
DHCP  
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) simplifies the administrative management of IP address  
configuration by automating address configuration for network clients. The DHCP standard provides  
for the use of DHCP servers, which are defined as any computer running the DHCP service. The DHCP  
server automatically allocates IP addresses and related TCP/IP configuration settings to DHCP-enabled  
clients on the network. The use of DHCP is required to utilize the Preboot eXecution Environment (PXE).  
The DHCP server supplies the address of a Boot Server (PXE Server) in the DHCP response. For more  
information on DHCP, see the Internet Software Consortium at: http://www.isc.org/products/DHCP/ and  
also see: RFC 2131 at: ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2131.txt.  
6
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
PXE  
“PXE is defined on a foundation of industry-standard Internet protocols and services that are widely  
deployed in the industry, namely TCP/IP, DHCP, and TFTP. These standardize the form of the  
interactions between clients and servers. . . In brief, the PXE protocol operates as follows. The client  
initiates the protocol by broadcasting a DHCPDISCOVER containing an extension that identifies the  
request as coming from a client that implements the PXE protocol. Assuming that a DHCP server or a  
Proxy DHCP server implementing this extended protocol is available, after several intermediate steps,  
the server sends the client a list of appropriate Boot Servers. The client then discovers a Boot Server of  
the type selected and receives the name of an executable file on the chosen Boot Server. The client  
uses TFTP to download the executable from the Boot Server. Finally, the client initiates execution of the  
downloaded image. At this point, the client’s state must meet certain requirements that provide a  
predictable execution environment for the image.” Source: Intel®, Preboot Execution Environment  
(PXE) Specification. For in-depth information on PXE visit the Preboot Execution Environment (PXE)  
Bootworks  
Bootworks is pushed out by the PXE Server to the target client server. This allows the Altiris  
Deployment Solution to manage the client or target server when off-line, before it is configured with  
an operating system. All disk cloning requires that DOS be loaded on the target PC. Bootworks is a  
patented Altiris technology that provides access to the network under a DOS boot. Bootworks presents  
the following options for getting DOS loaded on the target PC:  
PXE — PXE requires a DOS boot image to be created and made available on a PXE Server. This  
process is done during the Altiris software installation, which is beyond the scope of this document.  
DHCP is also required. As a result, the target server connects to a PXE Server and downloads the  
DOS boot image. The Altiris Deployment Solution installation will walk you through creating a DOS  
boot image and installing the PXE and DHCP server components during the RDP application  
installation.  
DOS Boot Diskette — For non-PXE-enabled servers, this is an alternative option for booting to DOS.  
A boot diskette must be created for each NIC type. Altiris provides a boot disk wizard that takes  
you step-by-step through the process of building a boot diskette.  
AClient  
AClient agent is an Altiris application that downloads to the client server that enables it to  
communicate with the deployment server. It is a small utility that allows target servers to be managed  
by the deployment server. The AClient agent must be on the target server so that it can communicate  
with the deployment server. AClient agents are responsible for pre-configuring the target server prior  
to executing any images, as well as any post-configuration of servers after any imaging event, such as  
rebooting when necessary.  
7
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
HP BladeSystem requirements for hosting the server blade  
Figure 4. HP BladeSystem c7000 enclosure, rear view  
Deployment  
Whether a small, medium, or large corporate network infrastructure, HP BladeSystem provides a  
faster, simpler, and lower cost way to build and configure in an IT infrastructure. The HP BladeSystem  
c-Class infrastructure of unified server, storage, network, power/cooling and management  
capabilities provides quick and easy delivery of applications and services while operating the IT  
environment. Using HP BladeSystem tools with the HP ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack  
(RDP), all configuration tasks can be accomplished in an efficient and timely matter.  
The requirements for this implementation are to support the server blade operation in one to three  
basic IT scenarios. The server blade would first require specific physical and electrical requirements  
from the hosting enclosure and also require some physical and electrical infrastructure support to host  
a Windows operating system (i.e., support services from the network such as a TCP/IP infrastructure,  
a SAN infrastructure if that functionality is required, power and cabling infrastructure, etc.). This  
server blade would require the support of an HP BladeSystem enclosure as detailed below.  
The following is a detailed list of requirements for the HP BladeSystem enclosure that is required to  
host and operate this server blade. This blade specification is written with the assumption that all  
services will be executed locally on the server blade itself. Therefore, this server blade will act as the  
PXE server and DHCP server. In addition, all images will be stored locally on the server blade. With  
that in mind, the HP c-Class BladeSystem components for the blade-specific provisioning server  
include the following:  
HP BladeSystem c7000 enclosure  
The HP BladeSystem 16-bay enclosure can effectively be set up, configured, and ready to run in  
approximately 15 minutes. By using the initial setup wizard and the Insight Display feature, a systems  
engineer can configure the enclosure for power, remote access and networking without a need for a  
single cable. After configuring a static IP address for the Onboard Administrator (OA), a system  
8
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
administrator can take full, remote control of the enclosure and quickly complete the configuration.  
The c-Class blades are now ready for the operating system deployment from the RDP server.  
The c7000 enclosure houses the entire infrastructure for all HP BladeSystem components (server  
blades, blade network switches or pass-through modules, blade SAN switches or SAN pass-through  
modules, management modules, power supplies, and fans). In addition, the enclosure provides an  
integrated on-board Insight Display screen that allows for the physical management of the entire  
BladeSystem enclosure and components.  
Figure 5. HP BladeSystem c7000 enclosure, front view, empty: BLc7000 Enclosure Part number: 412152-B21  
Table 1. BLc7000 Enclosure Specification  
Up 16 Half-Height Blades  
Device bays (Front side)  
Up to 8 Full-Height Blades  
Mixed configurations supported  
Interconnect bays (Rear side)  
Interconnects Ethernet  
Installed in matched pairs for redundancy, 8 total, any  
supported I/O fabric (Ethernet, Fibre Channel,  
InfiniBand (IB))  
HP 1Gb Ethernet Pass-Thru Module  
3020 Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch  
GbE2c Ethernet Blade Switch  
HP 16 port 4Gb FC Pass-Thru Module  
Brocade 4Gb SAN Switch  
Interconnects Fibre Channel (FC)  
Interconnects InfiniBand  
Power supply (Rear side)  
HP 4X DDR IB Switch Module  
Up to 6 x 2250W  
9
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Cooling fans (Rear side)  
HP Active Cool fan technology provides superior  
airflow, power and acoustic performance and is hot-  
pluggable for easy upgrades.  
From 4 up to 10 fans, must be installed in a specific  
order of fan bay locations per how many server blades  
are installed in the enclosure.  
Insight Display (Front side)  
For easy setup and configuration of the BladeSystem  
located in front of the unit.  
Onboard Administrator (Rear side)  
Total 2 for redundant Onboard Administration providing  
LAN and serial access.  
Height  
Width  
Depth  
10U  
17.5 inches (445 mm) fits 19 inch rack  
32 inches (813 mm)  
HP GbE2c Ethernet Blade Switch  
Figure 6. HP GbE2c Ethernet Blade Switch for HP c-Class BladeSystem: Part number: 410917-B21  
Onboard Administrator management module  
Figure 7. HP Onboard Administrator management module  
10  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
HP Active Cool Fan  
Figure 8. HP Active Cool Fan: Part number: 412140-B21  
HP c7000 Enclosure Power Supply  
HP c7000 Enclosure Power Supply: Part number: 412138-B21  
Table 2. HP c-Class Power Specification  
Power input type (one of the following)  
Integrated in enclosure: Single or 3-Phase  
power options for maximum power  
configuration flexibility. Additional power  
supplies (up to six) can be added to your  
enclosure, allowing the BladeSystem to grow  
with your changing needs. Three types of HP  
BladeSystem c7000 enclosures are available,  
depending on type of datacenter power  
infrastructure:  
Single-phase enclosure available worldwide for  
use with in-rack PDUs, which accept C19 - C20  
power cords.  
Three-Phase enclosure with a pair of US/Japan  
power cords with NEMA L15-30P power  
connectors.  
Three-phase enclosure with a pair of  
International power cords with IEC309, 5-Pin,  
16A power connectors.  
N+N and N+1 power supply redundancy  
configurations to ensure power, performance,  
cost and reliability can be matched to your  
needs.  
11  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
HP ProLiant BL480c server blade (Up to 8 in a single c7000 enclosure):  
Figure 9. HP ProLiant BL480c Server Blade  
Table 3. HP ProLiant BL480c Server Blade Specification  
Processor  
Dual-Core Intel Xeon® Processor 5140  
2.33 GHz / 1333MHz FSB  
Memory  
Storage  
4GB (4x1 GB) PC2-5300 DDR2 (up to 48GB)  
4 @ 72GB 10K SAS 2.5 Hot-Plug Hard Drive;  
RAID 5  
Storage Controller  
Networking  
HP Smart Array P400i  
Two (2) embedded NC373i Multifunction  
Gigabit Server Adapters  
One (1) embedded NC326i Dual Port Gigabit  
Server Adapter  
12  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Infrastructure bill of materials (BOM)  
c7000 enclosure, power, OA, fan, and blade switch bill of materials  
(BOM)  
Table 4. HP Bill of Materials – *Check for the latest releases and part numbers  
Quantity  
Part Number* Description  
1
1
1
4
4
412152-B21  
410917-B21  
412142-B21  
412140-B21  
412138-B21  
BLc7000 Enclosure  
HP c7000 GbE2c Ethernet Blade Switch  
HP Redundant Onboard Administrator Option  
HP Active Cool Fan  
HP c7000 Enclosure Power Supply  
HP ProLiant BL480c bill of materials (BOM)  
Table 5. HP Bill of Materials – *Check for the latest releases and part numbers  
Quantity Part Number* Description  
1
2
2
4
404707-B21  
416671-B21  
397411-B21  
375861-B21  
HP ProLiant BL480c server blade  
Dual-Core Intel® Xeon® 5140 (2.33GHz, 1333 FSB) Processor  
HP 2GB Fully Buffered DIMM PC2-5300 2x1GB Memory  
HP 72GB Hot Plug 2.5 SAS 10,000 rpm Hard Drive  
Software installation requirements for HP ProLiant Essentials  
Rapid Deployment Pack  
Software requirements for blade-specific provisioning server:  
Windows Server 2003 with SP1 or Windows Server 2003 R2 (32bit)  
Server may or may not be a domain member  
NTFS file system  
DHCP Configured with IP Scope activated  
Microsoft .NET Framework 1.1 (Will install during RDP installation if not already installed)  
Microsoft Server Desktop Engine (MSDE) 2000 + SP3a or later (Disregard if SQL Server is already  
installed)  
13  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Initial deployment of provisioning server blade  
Before you begin configuring the enclosure and blade, it is helpful to reiterate some assumptions  
made earlier. This provisioning server will act as the DHCP Server, the PXE Server, and the HP RDP  
Provisioning Server. Many organizations may already have an existing DHCP Server in place. If a  
DHCP Server already exists within your infrastructure, just be sure to point to that DHCP Server during  
the time of HP Altiris RDP software installation. For the purposes of this document, it is assumed that  
this provisioning server is the only DHCP Server in the company.  
Configuring the c-Class enclosure  
Before you can provision any servers using the Blade Provisioning Server, you have to configure the  
enclosure first. Then you have to install and configure the initial first server blade as the provisioning  
server by installing HP ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack. This document will be a high level  
quick spec on how to initially setup and configure the enclosure and blade for the c-Class  
BladeSystem infrastructure. For more in depth, thorough discussion on the initial enclosure / blade  
configuration, please visit http://www.hp.com/go/bladesystem.  
Power up the c-Class BladeSystem Enclosure for the first time, and you should see the Insight Display  
Enclosure Settings screen on the Insight Display. You will use this Insight Display to configure the  
c7000 enclosure for the first time. Scroll through the menu until you can see Enclosure Settings. This is  
where you will configure IP settings for the OA Ethernet Port. You will assign a static IP Address for  
the OA Ethernet Port from the Insight Display. Next configure the network interface card on a laptop  
or desktop within the same IP subnet as on the OA. With a crossover cable, connect the OA Ethernet  
Port to the NIC on the laptop or desktop. Start a browser session (XSLT enabled browser with support  
for JavaScript 1.3 or equivalent and ActiveX enabled) and type the IP address of the OA as the URL.  
Sign in to the active OA and run the First Time Setup wizard.  
Figure 10. Onboard Administrator Sign In  
Enter the user name and initial administration password for your HP BladeSystem Onboard  
Administrator account found on the tag attached to the Onboard Administrator.  
14  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Figure 11. First Time Setup Wizard  
Once the enclosure is configured, insert the c-Class blade in the slot and wait for the OA to recognize  
it. Insert your operating system CD into the laptop or desktop CD/DVD ROM drive. The server blade  
will use the laptop/desktop CD/DVD drive as its virtual media device to boot from. Once the OA  
detects the blade, click on the Integrated Lights-Out (iLO) link for that particular blade. Then click on  
the Integrated Remote Console link. At this point, you will see the POST for that server blade and boot  
from the OS CD on the laptop/desktop computer. Finish the OS installation and install the HP ProLiant  
Essentials RDP 3.1 CD into the CD/DVD ROM drive to configure the initial c-Class server blade.  
15  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Configuring the initial server blade  
Before you install HP ProLiant Essentials RDP 3.1 or later on the initial c-Class blade, be sure you have  
the following core requirements installed:  
DHCP configured with IP Scope activated  
Microsoft .NET Framework 1.1 (Will install during RDP installation if not already installed)  
Microsoft Server Desktop Engine (MSDE) 2000 + SP3a or later (Disregard if SQL Server is already  
installed on a different server)  
Insert the HP ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack CD into the laptop or desktop CD/DVD ROM  
drive. During the installation, be sure to checkmark all boxes in the Rapid Deployment Pack window  
as shown in Figure 12.  
Figure 12. Check all boxes in RDP window  
16  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
The server will reboot once all the core pre-installation requirements are installed. Upon rebooting,  
accept the default File server path and insert the appropriate license file. On the Deployment Server  
Information window, install the Deployment Server on the local machine (c-Class initial server blade).  
Insert the appropriate static IP address of the server and type the user name and password. It should  
look something like Figure 13.  
Figure 13. Example deployment server window  
17  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Install the Deployment Database on the local machine with eXpress as the default database name.  
Select the Windows NT Authentication. Keep the default locations for installing the Pre-boot  
Operating System files for the WinPE x86 and x64. Select to install PXE Server on the local machine  
and select Windows PE pre-boot operating system as the default PXE boot menu. The PXE Server  
Information window should look similar to Figure 14.  
Figure 14. Example PXE Server Information window  
You will receive a message stating that the DHCP service must be running on the network for PXE to  
function correctly. Select to choose clients to connect directly to the Deployment Server with the correct  
IP address. Install the Deployment Console on the local machine. If you choose to install the  
Deployment Web Console Information on the local machine, be sure you have Microsoft Internet  
Information Services (IIS) installed. Verify all installation parameters and install when ready. Once HP  
ProLiant Essentials RDP is installed, you are ready to use the Blade Provisioning Server to deploy  
various usage scenarios to manage your network.  
18  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Usage scenarios for the blade provisioning server  
The three basic IT scenarios hosted on this server blade are:  
1. Mass deployment of HP ProLiant BL c-Class servers within an organization that is looking for  
automation in order to reduce errors and reduce the amount of time to deploy servers.  
2. Deploying applications using advanced imaging and scripting technology/methodology.  
3. Managing a multi-server blade infrastructure can be a challenging task without the right  
provisioning tool. The blade-specific provisioning server not only automates the deployment of  
application servers, but also provides the ability to manage multi-server environments that allow  
you to deploy and redeploy IT resources where they are most needed quickly and easily to adapt  
to changing business needs.  
The following outlines the functional requirements that typify the usage of this server blade. This  
includes a technical description of the three (3) scenarios with topology diagram and minimum  
requirements for hardware, software, installation and configuration.  
Scenario 1 – mass deployment of c-Class server blades  
Before beginning with scenario 1, it is helpful to reiterate some assumptions made earlier. This  
provisioning server will act as the DHCP Server, the PXE Server, and HP RDP Provisioning Server.  
Many organizations may already have an existing DHCP Server in place. If a DHCP Server already  
exists within your infrastructure, just be sure to point to that DHCP Server during the time of HP Altiris  
RDP software installation. For the purposes of this document, assume that this provisioning server is the  
only DHCP Server in the company.  
Unattended and automated large scale deployment of c-Class blade servers will benefit from the  
blade-specific provisioning server by significantly reducing the time to bring the servers online. In  
addition, the automation allows for very little, if any, human intervention, which reduces any chances  
of error that may occur during the deployment process.  
19  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Figure 15. Usage Scenario 1  
Scenario 2 – deploying applications  
The blade specific provisioning server provides a strategy/solution for rapidly deploying applications  
(Microsoft Windows Server 2003, BizTalk Server, SQL Server) on HP ProLiant BL c-Class servers using  
ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack. By providing automated systems provisioning (a key  
component of the HP Adaptive Infrastructure strategy) for applications, customers are better equipped  
to easily, effectively, and efficiently conduct business without being prone to errors. Numerous types  
of errors can occur when humans are charged with the task of configuring and deploying enterprise  
business-critical applications if a consistent procedure is not used. Data-entry errors or simple lack of  
technical expertise for any particular setting or configuration item can bring that application to a halt.  
Many of these problems could be overcome by automating the installation and deployment procedure  
in a consistent process. Automation leads to faster time to deployment for applications with a  
minimum number of problems and provides consistency in the deployment and re-deployment of  
server applications.  
20  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Figure 16. Usage Scenario 2  
Scenario 3 – managing multi-server blade infrastructure  
Blade-specific provisioning servers provide the ability to reallocate existing server resources to areas  
that are needed most. Perhaps an application server within a server farm has very little usage  
during a particular time when your web server farm is being stressed to a point where web requests  
are significantly delayed. Simply drag and drop an RDP job to re-provision and redeploy that  
application server to a web server to help offset the web traffic. When web request delays are no  
longer a problem, simply re-provision and redeploy the web server back to an application server.  
Manage server updates (Service Packs, Management Updates, Security Packs)  
Provide for the capture and storage of the newly deployed server’s configuration. Capture a  
snapshot of your current server configuration (saved as an image file) to rapidly deploy to new or  
existing servers. Redeploying an image can save you considerable amounts of time when server  
availability is crucial to your organization.  
21  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Figure 17. Usage Scenario 3  
Operations and maintenance  
It is important to follow guidelines for operating and maintaining the HP BladeSystem c-Class solution  
described in this document. You should follow the guidelines documented for the HP BladeSystem  
c-Class Onboard Administrator, for example. Maintenance documentation for the BL480c, the SB40c,  
and the BladeSystem c7000 Enclosure should also be followed.  
Upgrade and migration documentation is also available (or may become available) for the HP  
BladeSystem c-Class Onboard Administrator, the BL480c, the SB40c, and the BladeSystem c7000  
HP BladeSystem c-Class Onboard Administrator (see this page)  
Perform regular maintenance <See this page for BL480c>  
Upgrade and migrate <See this page for BL480c>  
22  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
Operations guide  
Integrating with other Microsoft applications (If appropriate)  
Server Upgrades <See this page for BL480c>  
– Software Updates  
– Hardware upgrades  
– Firmware upgrades  
Implementation services  
HP Services  
HP Factory Express  
The HP Factory Express portfolio includes 5 packaged services including customized configuration,  
factory racking, on-site installation, complex solution configuration, and system design. Customized  
solutions are also available. More information can be found at  
Implementing a proof-of-concept  
HP has presented example scenarios and configurations in this paper that reflect a specific  
deployment and workload, which may not exactly match a customer’s specific situation. HP therefore  
recommends that the readers implement a “proof-of-concept” deployment to determine exact solution  
and deployment details to meet their specific business need.  
Summary  
The goal of this specification was to provide a modular server blade design that can be used to  
automate the provisioning of line of business applications, services, and management updates. The  
server blade specification provided for the following automated tasks: line-of-business applications  
(Microsoft 2003 Server, Microsoft BizTalk Server, and Microsoft SQL Server), Service Packs, and  
Management Updates  
23  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 
For more information  
HP Integrated Lights-Out (iLO) remote management, www.hp.com/servers/ilo  
HP ProLiant servers, www.hp.com/go/proliant  
HP Services, www.hp.com/hps  
How to buy, www.hp.com/buy  
HP ProLiant Essentials Rapid Deployment Pack (RDP) www.hp.com/go/rdp  
To provide comments and feedback on this document, please go to  
© 2007 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained  
herein is subject to change without notice. The only warranties for HP products and  
services are set forth in the express warranty statements accompanying such  
products and services. Nothing herein should be construed as constituting an  
additional warranty. HP shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors or  
omissions contained herein.  
Microsoft and Windows are U.S. registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.  
Intel and Xeon are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its  
subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.  
4AA1-0492ENW, Rev. 1, February 2007  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
 

Graco Crib 9415 User Manual
HANNspree Flat Panel Television ST08 10A1 User Manual
Hans Grohe Indoor Furnishings 10120XX1 User Manual
Hasbro Motorized Toy Car 82414 Asst User Manual
Healthrider Treadmill HRTL06900 User Manual
Honeywell Home Gym 4600g 4600r User Manual
Hoshizaki Ice Maker DCM 270BAH OS User Manual
Hotpoint Refrigerator HS3022VL User Manual
HP Hewlett Packard Power Supply 9483C User Manual
IKEA Indoor Furnishings AA 65329 2 User Manual