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.
The Cisco UCS C3260 Storage Server is a dense storage rack server with dual server nodes, optimized for large datasets used in environments such as big data, cloud, object storage, and content delivery. It belongs to the Cisco UCS C-Series rack-mount servers product family.
System IO Controllers (SIOC).
Support of up to two server modules.
Capability to operate in a standalone mode.
Chassis level functionality in the standalone mode—Shared components such as storage adapters, fans and power supply units are configured at the chassis level.
Data Center Ethernet connectivity to a server host through a shared dual virtual interface card (VIC).
Individual hard disk drives (HDD) can be assigned to either server in the dedicated or shared mode.
In addition, one of the server slots in the Cisco UCS C3260 Storage Server can be utilized by a storage expansion module for an additional four 3.5" drives. The server modules can also accommodate two solid state drives (SSD) for internal storage dedicated to that module. The chassis supports Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) expanders that can be configured to assign the 3.5" drives to individual server modules.
For more information, see the Cisco UCS 3260 Quick Reference Guide.
A chassis profile defines the storage, firmware and maintenance characteristics of a chassis. You can create a chassis profile for the Cisco UCS C3260 Storage Server. When a chassis profile is associated to a chassis, Cisco UCS Central automatically configures the chassis to match the configuration specified in the chassis profile.
A chassis profile includes four types of information:
Chassis definition—Defines the specific chassis to which the profile is assigned.
Maintenance policy—Includes the maintenance policy to be applied to the profile.
Firmware specifications—Defines the chassis firmware package that can be applied to a chassis through this profile.
Disk zoning policy—Includes the zoning policy to be applied to the storage disks.
In addition to any guidelines or recommendations that are specific to the policies included in chassis profiles and chassis profile templates, such as the disk zoning policy, adhere to the following guidelines and recommendations that impact the ability to associate a chassis profile with a chassis:
Each chassis can be associated with only one chassis profile. Similarly, each chassis profile can be associated with only one chassis at a time.
Chassis profiles are supported only on the Cisco UCS C3260 Storage Server.
C bundles earlier than Cisco UCS Manager Release 3.1(2) are not supported on the Cisco UCS C3260 Storage Server.
Step 1 | Click Browse Tables and choose Profiles. |
Step 2 | On the Profiles page, choose the chassis profile that you want to modify. |
Step 3 | On the Chassis Profile page, click the Tools icon and choose Assign Chassis Manually. |
Step 4 | Choose the chassis that you want to assign to the chassis profile. |
Step 5 | Click Assign. |
The Chassis Profile Template details page displays detailed information on the chassis profile template. From here you can:
The Templates page allows you to view all templates in Cisco UCS Central. You can filter to view the following types of template:
From this page, you can:
The Chassis Profile details page displays detailed information on the chassis profile. From here you can:
View logs and configuration status.
Create a chassis profile template from this chassis profile.
Bind or unbind from the chassis profile template.
Assign or unassign a chassis.
Reapply the configuration to the associated chassis.
Delete, clone, or rename the chassis profile.
Acknowledge and decommission a chassis.
Turn on or turn off the Locator LED for a chassis.
Launch Cisco UCS Manager for the specific Cisco UCS domain.
Note |
|
The Local Chassis Profile details page displays detailed information on a local chassis profile. Local chassis profiles are managed by Cisco UCS Manager.
From here you can:
View logs.
Acknowledge and decommission a chassis.
Turn on or turn off the Locator LED for a chassis.
Launch Cisco UCS Manager for the specific Cisco UCS domain.
Note |
|
The Profiles page allows you to view all service profiles or all chassis profiles in Cisco UCS Central. Select either Service Profiles or Chassis Profiles from the top of the page.
From this page, you can:
The Chassis page displays the following information related to the chassis associated with the registered Cisco UCS domain:
Chassis |
Hardware |
Configuration |
Status |
---|---|---|---|
This column displays the following information for a chassis: |
This column displays the following hardware information for a chassis: |
This column displays the following configuration for a Chassis: |
This column displays the following status for a Chassis: |
The Storage Chassis page allows you to manage and monitor all Cisco UCS C3260 Storage Servers in a Cisco UCS domain.
You can view the following information on the selected chassis and its components:
Basic—Displays the overall status and an overview of all the components within the selected chassis, fault summary, configuration errors and hardware details.
System IO Controllers—Displays overall status and detailed information about the shared adapter.
Servers—Displays overall status, hardware, and firmware details of the server associated with this chassis. If you select a server, the page redirects to the server detail view page.
SAS Expanders—Displays the overall status, configuration, and hardware for each SAS expander associated with this chassis.
Storage Enclosures—Displays the overall status and configuration of the storage enclosures associated with this chassis by enclosure or by slot.
Storage—Displays list of the storage in the selected server. Select a disk to view the current overall status, hardware, and controller details.
Fans—Displays a list of fans in the chassis. Select a fan to view information related to its module, overall status and hardware details.
PSUs—Displays a list of all the PSUs in the chassis. Select a PSU to view information related to its fault summary, overall status, and other property details.
You can also perform the following tasks:
Acknowledge and decommission a chassis.
Turn on or turn off the Locator LED for a chassis.
Modify the discovery policy for the selected chassis.
Launch Cisco UCS Manager for the specific Cisco UCS domain.
Note |
|
Step 1 | Click the Browse Tables icon and choose Profiles. |
Step 2 | Click Chassis Profiles. |
Step 3 | Select the chassis profile for which you want to view configuration status. |
Step 4 | On the detailed
view for your selection, click the
Alerts icon and choose
Configuration Status.
The Configuration Status page displays. |
Step 5 | Click Close to close the window. |
To view consolidated faults of both the chassis profile and associated chassis, click the Alerts icon on the chassis profile page and choose Faults. The following information is displayed:
Filters—Filter the data in the table by severity, fault type, and timestamp.
Code—Unique identifier associated with the fault.
Timestamp—Day and time at which the fault occurred.
Cause—Brief description of what caused the fault.
Affected Object—The name and location of the component that this issue affects, and the domain name where it is found.
Fault Details—More information about the log message.
Severity—Displays an icon denoting the fault severity. The icon key displays below the table.
Action—Any action required by the fault.
You can view faults from each chassis associated with a chassis profile. To view chassis faults, click the Faults icon in the Chassis Fault Summary section of a Chassis Profile details page. The Faults Logs page displays information on the type and severity level of the fault and allows you to monitor and acknowledge the faults.
Filters—Filter the data in the table by severity, fault type, and timestamp.
Code—Unique identifier associated with the fault.
Timestamp—Day and time at which the fault occurred.
Cause—Brief description of what caused the fault.
Affected Object—The name and location of the component that this issue affects, and the domain name where it is found.
Fault Details—More information about the log message.
Severity—Displays an icon denoting the fault severity. The icon key displays below the table.
Action—Whether user acknowledgment is required.
The chassis discovery policy determines whether a specific chassis is included in a fabric port channel after chassis discovery. This allows for different chassis connectivity modes per fabric interconnect. By default, the chassis discovery policy is set to global. This means that connectivity control is configured when the chassis is newly discovered, using the settings configured for Chassis/FEX Link Grouping Policy on the domain group system policy. Depending on the domain group equipment policy setting, the chassis links are either all set to port channel or single links.
When you set the chassis discovery policy manually for a chassis, you have the following options:
None—All links functions as single links.
Port Channel—All links functions as a port channel.
Global—All links use the settings in the Equipment policy for the entire domain group.
For more information, see Managing Equipment Policies in the Cisco UCS Central Administration Guide.
Note | The chassis discovery policy is applicable only when the hardware configuration supports fabric port channels, and the chassis is directly connected to a fabric interconnect. |
Step 1 | Click the Browse Tables icon and choose Chassis. |
Step 2 | Click a chassis. |
Step 3 | On the chassis page, click the Tasks icon and choose Discovery Policy. |
Step 4 | Choose whether to use the global domain group policy, force all links to function as a port channel, or force all links to function as single links. |
Step 5 | Click Save. |
A chassis maintenance policy determines when a chassis is rebooted when changes are made to the chassis profile. By default, the chassis maintenance policy always requires that a user acknowledges the changes before the reboot occurs.
All chassis maintenance policies require user acknowledgment before any maintenance-related configuration can be applied to the chassis.
Step 1 |
In the
Actions bar, type
Create
Maintenance Policy and press Enter.
|
Step 2 | In the Maintenance Policy Create dialog box, choose Chassis. |
Step 3 | Choose the
Organization where you want to create the policy,
and enter the
Name and optional
Description.
The name is case sensitive. |
Step 4 | Click Evaluate to view the impact of the policy. |
Step 5 | Click Create. |
The Chassis Firmware Package Policy page displays details about an individual chassis firmware package policy. From this page, you can edit the policy or view the chassis to which the policy is associated.
Step 1 |
In the
Actions bar, type
Create
Chassis Firmware Package Policy and press Enter.
| ||
Step 2 | In the Chassis Firmware Package Policy dialog box, click Basic and choose the Organization in which you want to create the policy. | ||
Step 3 | Enter a
Name and optional
Description.
The policy name is case-sensitive. | ||
Step 4 | Select the
Chassis
Version of the firmware, as required for your environment.
| ||
Step 5 | In the
Components tab, click
Add to select any components that want to exclude
from the firmware update.
The included and excluded components display. The following components can be excluded: | ||
Step 6 | Click
Create.
|
Disk zoning policies allow you to manage the disks on your chassis servers when associated in a chassis profile. After a disk zoning policy has been created, you can view the disk zoning policy page to review what is included in the policy.
Depending on the storage controller, the disk types that are supported for your disk zoning policy may vary:
Storage Controller |
Supported Disk Types |
---|---|
UCSC-C3X60-R1GB |
Supports unassigned, dedicated, and chassis spare disks. |
UCS-C3K-M4RAID |
Supports unassigned, dedicated, and chassis spare disks on the UCSC-C3K-M4SRB server only. |
UCSC-C3X60-HBA |
Supports shared disks for data storage operations only. LUNs cannot be created on the shared disks. |
Step 1 | In the
Actions bar, type
Create
Disk Zoning Policy and press Enter.
|
Step 2 | In the Basic tab, enter the Name and optional Description. |
Step 3 | Choose whether
to enable
Preserve
Configuration.
If enabled, any disk zoning that is configured on the chassis remains as is when the chassis is associated to a chassis profile. If disabled, enter your disk zoning preferences in the Disk Slots tab. |
Step 4 | In
Disk
Slots, assign the disks as follows:
|
Step 5 | Click Create. |
Step 1 | Click the Browse Tables icon and choose Chassis. |
Step 2 | Click a storage chassis. |
Step 3 | On the storage chassis page, click System IO Controller. |
Step 4 | Click a system IO controller to expand it. |
Step 5 | Click the Tools icon and choose Configuration Status. |
Step 6 | On the storage chassis page, click System IO Controller. On the System IO Controller dialog box, you can view the SIOC, the CMC, and the chassis discovery configuration status. |
Step 7 | Click Close. |