Posts Tagged ‘installation’

Brocade SAN Health Tutorial

// December 10th, 2009 // 2 Comments » // Technical Know-It-All

As promised before, I will try to explain in detail how to work Brocade SAN Health. Just a recap, Brocade SH is an exceptionally informative tool that allows you to capture performance, and configuration data from Brocade and McData SAN fabrics. It will then take this data and churn out a very useful Visio diagram and an Excel file.

Alright, let’s start!

Step 1

1. Firstly, you would need to download the tool from the Brocade website. Once downloaded, the install takes like 3 secs. Fire up the tool and you will see a screen like above.

Step 2

2. Click on “New”, and it will prompt you to fill up all your contact details. Fill it in accordingly.

Step 3

3. Click on the “Report Return” tab, and fill in the your email address. It is “IMPORTANT” to get your email address right here because ultimately, this is where your report is going to be sent to.

Step 4

4. Click on the “SAN Details” tab next, and give your audited SAN a name.

Step 5

5. Next click on “Add Switches”. Input the IP addresses and login details of the switches. Usually, you would only require 1 switch from each fabric. Once it successfully logs in to the first switch, the rest is discovered in-band.

Step 6

6. Click on “Fabric Details”. Here fill up fabric name, vendor details, and the duration of this audit.

Step 7 Step 8

7. Verify that all the “Green Smiley” faces are there. If not click on each of those and make sure they are green. When that’s done, you are ready to do a preflight check! Go to the “Start Audit” tab and run “Pre-Flight Check”. If pre-flight is good, the “Start Audit” button will be available.

Step 9

8. It will then start running. Depending on how long you want it to capture, you can probably minimise the window and let it run in the background. I usually recommend 24 hours just so you get a complete trending of the peaks and lows.

Step 9

9. Once complete, it will encrypt the file (so it is safe to be sent across the Internet). Keep clicking “Next” and read the on-screen instructions.

Step 10

10. The last screen will tell you where the <filename>.BSH ( Brocade San Health) file is saved. You will then need to forward the *.BSH file to SHUpload@brocade.com. This file will then get processed in the backend by Brocade server’s and then you should receive a reply in 24 hours (more often than not, you will get it in 4-5 hrs). In the event that you don’t hear from them in that time frame, email SHAdmin@brocade.com and let them know the filename of the *.BSH file, they will let you know if it’s in the queue.

That is it! Simple!

Many of my customers swear on this, and they do it on a weekly basis just to keep their SAN environments in check. So give it a go. Things that are FREE are rarely this good & usefull….

P/S : You cannot capture performance data from McData fabrics and there are no roadmaps for this.

Synology DS210J NAS Review

// December 4th, 2009 // 2 Comments » // Technical Know-It-All

Recently, my trusty TVIX 6500 pulled a stunt and overheated my movie and media collection (and fried my 1TB HDD with it). Should have seen it coming (and to think of it, I work in the Enterprise Storage industry). Everytime I saw a RAID 1/0 NAS unit at Harvey Norman, Sim Lim or Funan, I kept telling myself to not spend the money, “I can live without it”.

Finally I bit the bullet and went shopping for NAS unit that did RAID 1/0. As you might have already known, there are like heaps and heaps and heaps of NAS units out there. I was pretty set on getting the Vantec external USB drive which did RAID 1/0 (but without the NAS feature), until I came about a store that sold the Synology DS210J. I have read about it, and I knew it was pricey, but like any techie, I was curious. So no surprise, I bought it and fitted 2 x 1.5TB drives in it.

I’m always a firm believer that “price do not lie” and while it was slightly pricier that the others, I wanted to give it a go anyhow.

synology

I wasn’t too impressed at first because I had some issues setting it up using my Mac, then I dug out my rusty Windows box and finally got it initialised. I felt it was kinda silly given that it required me to go to the Synology website to download the latest OS for the NAS given it wasn’t preinstalled.

Got that done, and wall-lah… I’m moving whats left of my music and media collection on to it. Didn’t have too much time fidgeting around with it for over a month but slowly I learnt more and more about it, and I must say, it is a very very good buy! I don’t say that too often but I’m truly impressed and happy with it. I am now running all the features on it, that I initially thought was a “good to have”.

If you are contemplating on getting it, trust me its well worth it!

Login Screen from the GUI

Login Screen from the GUI

Full list of options

List of options

An alternative to FTP. Almost sharepoint-ish

An alternative to FTP. Almost sharepoint-ish

Bittorrent downloader

Bittorrent downloader

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