Book Image

Implementing Cisco UCS Solutions - Second Edition

By : Anuj Modi, Prasenjit Sarkar
Book Image

Implementing Cisco UCS Solutions - Second Edition

By: Anuj Modi, Prasenjit Sarkar

Overview of this book

Cisco Unified Computer System (UCS) is a powerful solution for modern data centers and is responsible for increasing efficiency and reducing costs. This hands-on guide will take you through deployment in Cisco UCS. Using real-world examples of configuring and deploying Cisco UCS components, we’ll prepare you for the practical deployments of Cisco UCS data center solutions. If you want to develop and enhance your hands-on skills with Cisco UCS solutions, this book is certainly for you. We start by showing you the Cisco UCS equipment options then introduce Cisco UCS Emulator so you can learn and practice deploying Cisco UCS components. We’ll also introduce you to all the areas of UCS solutions through practical configuration examples. Moving on, you’ll explore the Cisco UCS Manager, which is the centralized management interface for Cisco UCS. Once you get to know UCS Manager, you’ll dive deeper into configuring LAN, SAN, identity pools, resource pools, and service profiles for the servers. You’ll also get hands-on with administration topics including backup, restore, user’s roles, and high availability cluster configuration. Finally, you will learn about virtualized networking, third-party integration tools, and testing failure scenarios. By the end of this book, you’ll know everything you need to know to rapidly grow Cisco UCS deployments in the real world.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Summary


In this chapter, we learned about the miscellaneous and most common tasks along with some advanced management tasks you need to perform with UCS Manager. We started looking at how to obtain and configure extra port licenses for Fabric Interconnects. We learned that UCS Fabric Interconnects are designed for continuous operation and hence do not have a power button. It is however possible to reboot Fabric Interconnect, but only from CLI. We learned about a corner case requirement in a DR situation for how to control blade power usage. We learned about looking into the status messages and turning on/off the locator LEDs available on blades, blade chassis, and Fabric Interconnects. We covered what the default logging setting is and how we can configure a remote syslog server. We configured the Call Home feature which can be used to inform/alert UCS management teams and Cisco TAC.

Finally, we learned about how we can configure organizational structure and RBAC in UCS. We configured an...