Active IQ Unified Manager Discussions
Active IQ Unified Manager Discussions
I have a NetApp FAS3140HA which I wish to manage via System Manager 2.0R1 (I previously used System Manager 1.1). For security, I restrict HTTPS management to the e0M interface, rather than allowing access through the "client" interfaces. However, when I try to add a controller to System Manager and enter the e0M interface IP address, it auto-discovers the partner node via the "client" interface (which is a VIF). As a result, I cannot log in due to the expected error of "HTTPS access denied due to the value of http.admin.access". I want to add just the e0M interfaces. Is this possible?
Solved! See The Solution
There is a workaround, although I still am annoyed that NetApp does not seem to be acting on this issue. They must think it is crazy to want to isolate management traffic to a management network….
I got around it by adding entries to my local hosts file on the management server. You have to substitute the management IP for the filer’s main IP. For example, if your first controller is “filer01” and the primary data interface is 192.168.1.2, but the management IP is 192.168.2.5, then you need an entry that says:
192.168.2.5 filer01
Likewise for the second controller. When you manually point System Manager to the first controller and it auto-discovers the partner controller, it will get the mgmt IP from your hosts file. This may impair CIFS/NFS access from the management host, depending on your setup and network location, but it worked fine for us.
Jim
FYI, looks like a bug. I submitted to support, had a WebEx session and it is being investigated.
Did you ever get resolution to this issue? We have our HA pair configured the same way, and are having the same problem with the latest version of System Manager.
There is a workaround, although I still am annoyed that NetApp does not seem to be acting on this issue. They must think it is crazy to want to isolate management traffic to a management network….
I got around it by adding entries to my local hosts file on the management server. You have to substitute the management IP for the filer’s main IP. For example, if your first controller is “filer01” and the primary data interface is 192.168.1.2, but the management IP is 192.168.2.5, then you need an entry that says:
192.168.2.5 filer01
Likewise for the second controller. When you manually point System Manager to the first controller and it auto-discovers the partner controller, it will get the mgmt IP from your hosts file. This may impair CIFS/NFS access from the management host, depending on your setup and network location, but it worked fine for us.
Jim
Yeah, I just found that in the latest Release Notes. I agree, that a workaround changing the way the name is resolved is not an acceptable workaround, considering that is the host on which all the CIFS shares that I use are located.