Cisco SFS Product Family Element Manager User Guide, Release 2.10.0
Edit Tasks

Table Of Contents

Edit Tasks

Viewing Properties of One Interface Card

Viewing Properties of All Interface Cards of the Same Type

Viewing Properties of One Port

Viewing Bridging Properties of an Ethernet Port

Viewing SFP Properties of a Fibre Channel Port

Viewing VSAN Properties of a Fibre Channel Port

Viewing Properties of All Ports of the Same Type

Configuring Interface Card Properties

Configuring Administrative Card Types

Configuring One Interface Card as Administrative Card Type

Configuring Multiple Cards as Administrative Card Types

Enabling or Disabling a Card

Enabling or Disabling Cards from a One Card Display

Enabling or Disabling Multiple Cards

Configuring Port Properties

Configuring a Port Name

Configuring the Name of One Port

Configuring Multiple Port Names

Enabling or Disabling a Port

Enabling or Disabling One Port

Enabling or Disabling Multiple Ports

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation from One Port

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation from Multiple Ports

Configuring Port Speed

Configuring the Port Speed for One Port

Configuring the Port Speed for Multiple Ports

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters for One Port

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters for Multiple Ports

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps from One Port

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps from Multiple Ports

Executing Port Actions

Executing a Port Action for One Port

Executing a Port Action for Multiple Ports

Configuring VSAN Properties for Fibre Channel Ports


Edit Tasks


These topics describe the Edit tasks for Element Manager:

Viewing Properties of One Interface Card

Viewing Properties of All Interface Cards of the Same Type

Viewing Properties of One Port

Viewing Properties of All Ports of the Same Type

Configuring Interface Card Properties

Configuring Port Properties


Note Use the Edit menu to quickly view port and card properties. You can use the Edit menu to choose all cards or ports of the same type and then view the properties of those elements. You can perform Edit menu tasks with the Element Manager chassis display. To view and configure the server switch from the chassis display, see the "Chassis Display Tasks" section.


Viewing Properties of One Interface Card

To view the properties of one interface card, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the card with properties that you want to view.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, click Card Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the card.

Step 3 Click the Card tab.

Table 4-1 describes the fields in this tab.

Table 4-1 Interface Card Fields 

Field
Description

Admin Type (gateway cards only)

Administratively configured card type.

Card Type

Dynamically discovered card type.

Enable/Disable Card

The up and down radio buttons enable or disable the card.

Current Card Status

Displays up if the card can currently run traffic; otherwise, displays down.

Operational State

Displays the general condition of the interface card. The general condition may appear as any of the following:

unknown

normal

wrongBootImage

bootFailed

tooHot

booting

A condition of unknown indicates an unsupported interface card. To address this condition, replace the card with a supported card.

The operational state of a card must appear as normal for the current status of the card to appear as up.

A wrong-image condition indicates that the active system image on the interface card does not match the active system image on the controller. All cards must run the same active system image as the controller card to function.

A bootFailed condition indicates that the active system image on the card was incompletely or incorrectly loaded. If the other interface cards come up successfully, reset the individual card. Otherwise, reboot your entire device.

The tooHot condition indicates that the card is overheating. From the Health menu, select Status, and then click on the Fans tab to see if your fans failed.

The booting condition indicates that the card has not finished loading necessary image data for internal configuration.

Card Boot Stage

Boot Stage can be any of the following:

recovery

ipl

ppcboot

fpga

pic

ib

rootfs

kernel

exe

done

none

Card Boot Status

Boot Status can be any of the following:

upgrading

success

failed

badVersion

badCrc

memoryError

outOfSpace

programmingError

hardwareError

fileNotFound

inProgress

none

Card Beacon Status

On and Off radio buttons will enable or disable this feature. When the beacon mode is turned on, the LEDs on the card starts blinking. When the beacon mode is turned off, the LEDs on the card stops blinking. The blinking green light helps you identify the physical location of the device.

Serial Number

Factory-assigned product serial number of the card.

PCA Serial Number

Printed circuit assembly (PCA) serial number of the card.

PCA Assembly Number

PCA assembly number of the card.

FRU Number

Field-replaceable unit (FRU) number of the card.

Product Version ID

Version ID of the card.

Action

Radio buttons follow these steps when you click Apply:

Take no action

Reset (reboot) the card

Delete inactive images from the card

Result

Displays the result of the last executed action from the Action field.


Viewing Properties of All Interface Cards of the Same Type

To view the properties of all interface cards of the same type, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then choose the type of card that you want to select.

Yellow selection boundaries appear around all cards of that type.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Card Properties.

A window opens and displays a table of all of the properties of the selected cards.


Viewing Properties of One Port

This topic describes how to view properties of a single port. In addition to the properties described here, these topics let you view IP addresses and bridging properties of an Ethernet port:

Viewing Bridging Properties of an Ethernet Port

Viewing SFP Properties of a Fibre Channel Port

Viewing VSAN Properties of a Fibre Channel Port

To view the properties of one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the port with properties that you want to view.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, select Port Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the port.

Table 4-2 describes the fields in the properties window of an Ethernet port.

Table 4-3 describes the fields in the properties window of a Fibre Channel port.

Table 4-4 describes the fields in the properties window of an InfiniBand port.

Table 4-2 Ethernet Port Properties Window Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Port Type

Displays the port number in slot#/port# notation.

Port Name

Port name that you can edit and apply to the port.

Enable/Disable Port

The up and down radio buttons let you configure the administrative status of the port.

Current Port Status

Indicates whether or not the port is ready for use.

Auto Negotiation Supported

Displays true if the port supports autonegotiation.

Enable Auto Negotiation check box

Enables or disables autonegotiation on the port.

Set Port Speed

Radio buttons let you configure the speed of the port.

Current Port Speed

Displays the speed of the port.

Set Duplex

Radio buttons let you configure the duplex setting of the port.

Current Duplex

Indicates whether the port runs in full duplex mode or half duplex mode.

Enable Link Up/Down Trap

Enabled and disabled radio buttons let you configure whether or not the port sends a trap when links go up or down.

MTU

Displays the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of the port, in bytes.

MAC Address

Displays the media access control (MAC) address of the port.

Last Changed On

Time and date that a user last configured the port.

Action

Flushes the ARP table when you click Apply.

Result

Displays the result of the executed action from the Action field.


Table 4-3 Fibre Channel Port Properties Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Port Type

Port number in slot#/port# notation.

Port Name

Port name that you can edit and apply to the port.

Enable/Disable Port

Up and down radio buttons let you configure the administrative status of the port.

Current Port Status

Indicates whether or not the port is ready for use.

Auto Negotiation Supported

Displays true if the port supports autonegotiation.

Enable Auto Negotiation

Check box that lets you enable or disable autonegotiation on the port.

Set Port Speed

Radio buttons that let you configure the speed of the port.

FcAdminConnectionType

FPort, Eport and EorFPort radio buttons let you configure the connection type of the port.

Current Connection Type

Type of Fibre Channel connection between the port and the SAN.

Current Port Speed

Displays the speed of the port.

Enable Link Up/Down Trap

Enabled and disabled radio buttons that let you configure whether or not the port sends a trap when links go up or down.

MTU

Maximum transmission unit (MTU) of the port, in bytes.

WWNN

World-wide node name of the HCA of the port.

WWPN

World-wide port name of the port.

FC ID

Native Fibre Channel ID of the port.

Principle Switch WWNN

Used to indicate a 64-bit WWNN of the principle Fibre Channel switch that this port is associated with.

Dist Services Timeout

The Fibre Channel EPort distance services timeout (in milliseconds). The values should be between 5000 to 100000.

Error Detect Timeout

The Fibre Channel EPort error detect timeout (in milliseconds). The values should be between 1000 to 100000.

Fabric Stability Timeout

Displays the Fibre Channel EPort fabric stability timeout (in milliseconds).

Recieve Transmission Timeout

Displays the Fibre Channel EPort recieve transmission timeout (in milliseconds).

Resource Alloc Timeout

The Fibre Channel EPort resource allocation timeout (in milliseconds).The values should be between 5000 to 100000

Check Age

Displays the Fibre Channel EPort check age (in minutes).

Hello Dead Interval

The Fibre Channel EPort hello dead interval (in milliseconds). The values should be between 2 to 65535.

Hello Interval

The Fibre Channel EPort hello interval (in milliseconds). The values should be between 2 to 65535.

Link State Ack Interval

The Fibre Channel EPort link state acknowledge interval (in milliseconds).The values should be between 1 to 65535.

Maximum Age

Displays the Fibre Channel EPort link state refresh time.

Admin Domain ID

The Fibre Channel EPort configured DomainId. Its range is determined by the InteropMode. The value "0" is used if no DomainId is configured, and the Fibre Channel Gateway will try get an assigned OperDomainId from the fabric. If a non zero value is configured, the value is used as a static DomainId.

Oper Domain ID

The Fibre Channel port runtime DomainId.

Interop Mode

The Fibre Channel EPort Interop Mode. The following are supported modes:

0-Cisco native mode

1-Cisco Brocadeor McData in interop mode

2-Brocade native with 16 or fewer ports

3-Brocade native with more than 16 ports

4-McData native

Connection Error Code

The Fibre Channel port connection error code.

Port WWNN

Used to indicate a Fibre Channel port's 64-bit WWNN. The initial value is eight zero bytes. When the port is in InteropMode 4 to connect with McData native mode, the administrator needs to assign a unique WWNN to the FibreChannel port. This WWNN is used to identify the virtual switch that this port represents.

Last Changed On

Time and date of the last time that a user configured the port.


Table 4-4 InfiniBand Port Properties Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Port Type

Port number in slot#/port# notation.

Port Name

Port name that you can edit and apply to the port.

Enable/Disable Port

The up and down radio buttons that let you configure the administrative status of the port.

Current Port Status

Indicates whether or not the port is ready for use.

Physical State

Status of the physical connection to the port.

Auto Negotiation Supported

Displays true if the port supports autonegotiation.

Enable Auto Negotiation

Check box that lets you enable or disable autonegotiation on the port.

Set Port Speed

Drop-down menu configures the link capacity of the port in terms of its link width (1x, 4x, or 12x) and its lane speed (SDR or DDR). Valid values are 1x-SDR (2.5 Gbps), 4x-SDR (10 Gbps), 12x-SDR(30 Gbps), 1x-DDR (5 Gbps), 4x-DDR (20 Gbps), and 12x-DDR (60 Gbps).

Current Port Speed

Displays the link capacity of the port.

Power Connector Dongle Type

Displays the power connector dongle type. This field appears only if the InfiniBand port is supporting the power connector. Possible values are as follows:

none (1)

ib4xFX (2)

Power Connector Dongle State

Indicates the power control state of the dongle that is attached to a powered interface connector. Possible values are as follows:

noStateChange (0)

on (1)

off (2)

Clear Counters

Check box allows you to clear the counters for the InfiniBand port.

Enable Link Up/Down Trap

Enabled and disabled radio buttons that let you configure whether or not the port sends a trap when links go up or down.

MTU field

Maximum transmission unit of the port, in bytes.

Last Changed On field

Time and date of the last time that a user configured the port.



Viewing Bridging Properties of an Ethernet Port

To view the bridging properties of one ethernet port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the Ethernet Port with the bridging properties that you want to view.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, click Port Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the port.

Step 3 Click the Bridging tab.

The Bridging tab appears. Table 4-5 describes the fields in this tab.

Table 4-5 Bridging Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Port

Port number, in slot#/port# format.

IEEE VLAN Tag

VLAN of the bridge group.

Bridge Group ID

Bridge group to which the port belongs. Assign the bridge group from the Ethernet menu by choosing Bridging.



Viewing SFP Properties of a Fibre Channel Port

To view the SFP properties of a Fibre Channel port, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the port.

Step 2 Click the SFP tab.

The SFP pane appears. Table 4-6 describes the fields in this tab.

Table 4-6 Fibre Channel Port SFP Properties

Field
Description

State

State of the SFP on a Fibre Channel port

Product Id

SFP product identifier

Vendor Id

SFP vendor part number

Vendor Serial Number

SFP vendor serial number

CLEI Code

SFP CLEI code

Cisco Part Number

SFP Cisco part number

VID

SFP version identifier



Viewing VSAN Properties of a Fibre Channel Port

To view the VSAN properties of a Fibre Channel port, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the port.

Step 2 Click the VSAN tab.

The VSAN pane appears. Table 4-7 describes the fields in this tab.

Table 4-7 Fibre Channel VSAN Properties

Field
Description

VSAN Id

Integer-value identifier of the Fibre Channel VSAN. The values ranges from 1 to 4093.

Current VSAN Id

The current ID of the VSAN.

Trunk Mode

The trunking mode configured by the user.

Current Trunk Mode

Current trunking mode.

Allowed VSANs

The VSANs that are allowed to be received or transmitted on the port when the port is operating in trunking mode.

Active VSANs

The active VSANs that this port is associated with. Only ports operating in trunk mode can belong to multiple VSANs.

Up VSANs

The list of VSANs (in the range 0 through 2047) whose operational state is 'up', which this port is associated with.


Viewing Properties of All Ports of the Same Type

To view the properties of all ports of the same type, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then choose the type of port that you want to select.

Yellow selection boundaries appear around all ports of that type.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a table of properties of the selected ports.


Configuring Interface Card Properties

You can configure interface card properties with the Edit menu or with the chassis display. For chassis display instructions, see "Chassis Display Tasks"

These topics describe how to configure card properties with the Edit menu:

Configuring Administrative Card Types

Enabling or Disabling a Card

Configuring Administrative Card Types

Configure administrative card types to reserve slots for particular interface cards. You can configure administrative card types in one of the following ways:

Configuring One Interface Card as Administrative Card Type

Configuring Multiple Cards as Administrative Card Types

Configuring One Interface Card as Administrative Card Type

To configure the card type for one interface card, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the type of card you want to configure.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Card Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the card.

Step 3 Click the appropriate radio button in the AdminType field, click Apply, and then click Close.


Configuring Multiple Cards as Administrative Card Types

To configure card types for multiple interface cards, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then choose a type of card.

Yellow selection boundaries appear around all cards of that type.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Card Properties.

A window opens and displays a table of all of the properties of the selected cards.

Step 3 In the AdminType column, click the type of the card that you want to configure.

A drop-down menu appears. Choose a value from the drop-down menu, and then repeat this step for each additional card that you want to configure.


Enabling or Disabling a Card

You can enable and disable cards using either of the following procedures:

Enabling or Disabling Cards from a One Card Display

Enabling or Disabling Multiple Cards

Enabling or Disabling Cards from a One Card Display

To enable or disable cards from a one-card display, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the card that you want to enable or disable.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Card Properties.

A window opens and displays the properties of the card.

Step 3 Click the up or down radio button, click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling Multiple Cards

To enable or disable cards from a multiple-card display, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then choose the type of card that you want to select.

Yellow selection boundaries appear around all cards of that type.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Card Properties.

A window opens and displays a table of all of the properties of the selected cards.

Step 3 In the Enable/Disable Card column, click the status of the card that you want to enable or disable.

A drop-down menu appears.

Step 4 Choose up or down. Repeat this step for each additional card that you want to enable or disable.


Configuring Port Properties

You can use the Edit menu to configure port properties, or you can use the chassis display directly. To configure port properties from the chassis display, see the "Chassis Display Tasks" section. These topics describe how to configure port properties from the Edit menu:

Configuring a Port Name

Enabling or Disabling a Port

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation

Configuring Port Speed

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps

Executing Port Actions

Configuring VSAN Properties for Fibre Channel Ports

Configuring a Port Name

These tasks rename ports from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Configuring the Name of One Port

Configuring Multiple Port Names

Configuring the Name of One Port

To configure the name of one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click a port with a name you want to change.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 In the Port Name field, edit the name, click Apply, and then click Close.


Configuring Multiple Port Names

To configure names for multiple ports, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click the type of the ports with names that you want to configure.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 Double-click the text in the Port Name column of a port that you want to rename, and then edit the name. Repeat this step for all ports that you want to rename.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling a Port

These topics describe how to enable or disable ports from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Enabling or Disabling One Port

Enabling or Disabling Multiple Ports

Enabling or Disabling One Port

To enable or disable one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the port that you want to enable or disable.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 In the Enable/Disable Port field, click the up or down radio button.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling Multiple Ports

To enable or disable multiple ports, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click the type of the ports that you want to enable or disable.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 In the Enable/Disable Port column, click the cell of a port that you want to enable or disable, and then choose up or down from the drop-down menu that appears.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation

These topics describe how to enable or disable autonegotiation on ports from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation from One Port

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation from Multiple Ports

Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation from One Port

To enable or disable autonegotiation on a port from one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the port for which you want to enable or disable autonegotiation.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 Check or uncheck the Enable Auto-Negotiation check box.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling Autonegotiation from Multiple Ports

To enable or disable autonegotiation on ports from multiple ports, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click the type of the ports for which you want to enable or disable autonegotiation.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, and choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 In the Enable Auto-Negotiation column, click the cell of a port that you want to configure, and then choose true or false from the drop-down menu that appears.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Configuring Port Speed

These topics describe how to configure port speed from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Configuring the Port Speed for One Port

Configuring the Port Speed for Multiple Ports


Note You must disable autonegotiation on a port before you assign a speed to the port.

For an InfiniBand port connected with an SDR cable or any cable longer than 8 feet, you must manually configure the port to support SDR only.


Configuring the Port Speed for One Port

To configure port speed for one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the port for which you want to configure speed.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 For an Ethernet or Fibre Channel port, in the Set Port Speed area, click the radio button that corresponds to the speed that you want to apply. For an InfiniBand port, in the Set Port Speed area. select the speed you want to apply from the drop-down menu.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Configuring the Port Speed for Multiple Ports

To configure the port speed on multiple ports at once, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click the type of the ports for which you want to configure the speed.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 In the Set Port Speed column, click the cell of a port that you want to configure, and then choose the speed that you want to apply from the drop-down menu that appears.

Repeat this step for all ports that you want to configure.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters

These topics describe how to clear InfiniBand port counters from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters for One Port

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters for Multiple Ports

See Table 7-1 for descriptions of the counters reset by this procedure.

Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters for One Port

To clear InfiniBand port counters for one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the Infiniband port for which you want to clear the counters.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, and choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 Check the Clear Counters check box.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Clearing InfiniBand Port Counters for Multiple Ports

To clear InfiniBand port counters for multiple ports at once, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click Infiniband Ports.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 In the Clear Counters column, click the cell of a port that you want to configure, and then choose true from the drop-down menu that appears.

Repeat this step for all ports that you want to configure.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps

These topics explain how to enable or disable link up and link down traps from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps from One Port

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps from Multiple Ports

Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps from One Port

To enable or disable up/down traps for one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the port that you want to configure.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 In the Enable Link Up/Down Trap field, click the enabled or disabled radio button.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Enabling or Disabling Link Up/Down Traps from Multiple Ports

To enable or disable link up/down traps for multiple ports, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click the type of the ports you want to configure.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 In the Enable Link Up/Down Trap column, click the cell of a port that you want to configure, and then choose enabled or disabled from the drop-down menu that appears.

Repeat this step for all ports that you want to configure.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Executing Port Actions

Some port types can execute specific actions. These topics describe how to execute actions from a one-port display or a multiple-port display:

Executing a Port Action for One Port

Executing a Port Action for Multiple Ports

Executing a Port Action for One Port

To execute an action for one port, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the Ethernet port for which you want to execute and action.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays port details.

Step 3 In the Action field, click the radio button of the action that you want to execute.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Executing a Port Action for Multiple Ports

To execute an action for multiple ports, follow these steps:


Step 1 From the Edit menu, choose Select All, and then click Ethernet Ports.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Port Properties.

A window opens and displays a tabular layout of the properties of the ports.

Step 3 In the Action column, click the cell of a port on which you want to execute an action, and then choose the action from the drop-down menu that appears.

Repeat this step for every port on which you want to execute an action.

Step 4 Click Apply, and then click Close.


Configuring VSAN Properties for Fibre Channel Ports

To configure VSAN properties for Fibre Channel ports, follow these steps:


Step 1 Click the Fibre Channel port that you want to configure the properties for.

Step 2 From the Edit menu, choose Properties.

A window opens and displays the port details.

Step 3 Click the VSAN tab.

Step 4 In the VSAN id field, enter the VSAN id (values from 1 through 4093).

Step 5 In the Trunk Mode field, click the radio button of the mode that you want to configure for this port.

Step 6 In the Allowed VSANs field enter the value (valid values can be a range ([0 to 7], [8 to15] etc) or numbers (1, 3, 4...) or all (i.e [1 to 4093]).

Step 7 Click Apply, and then click Close.