Configure RHEL 9.0 for FCP and iSCSI with ONTAP storage
The Linux Host Utilities software provides management and diagnostic tools for Linux hosts that are connected to ONTAP storage. When you install the Linux Host Utilities on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 9.0 host, you can use the Host Utilities to help you manage FCP and iSCSI protocol operations with ONTAP LUNs.
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You don't need to configure Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) settings because ONTAP LUNs are automatically mapped to the KVM hypervisor. |
Step 1: Optionally, enable SAN booting
You can configure your host to use SAN booting to simplify deployment and improve scalability.
Use the Interoperability Matrix Tool to verify that your Linux OS, host bus adapter (HBA), HBA firmware, HBA boot BIOS, and ONTAP version support SAN booting.
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Create a SAN boot LUN and map it to the host.
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Enable SAN booting in the server BIOS for the ports to which the SAN boot LUN is mapped.
For information on how to enable the HBA BIOS, see your vendor-specific documentation.
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Verify that the configuration was successful by rebooting the host and verifying that the OS is up and running.
Step 2: Install the Linux Host Utilities
NetApp strongly recommends installing the Linux Host Utilities to support ONTAP LUN management and assist technical support with gathering configuration data.
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Installing the Linux Host Utilities doesn't change any host timeout settings on your Linux host. |
Step 3: Confirm the multipath configuration for your host
You can use multipathing with RHEL 9.0 to manage ONTAP LUNs.
To ensure that multipathing is configured correctly for your host, verify that the /etc/multipath.conf
file is defined and that you have the NetApp recommended settings configured for your ONTAP LUNs.
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Verify that the
/etc/multipath.conf
file exits. If the file doesn't exist, create an empty, zero-byte file:touch /etc/multipath.conf
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The first time the
multipath.conf
file is created, you might need to enable and start the multipath services to load the recommended settings:systemctl enable multipathd
systemctl start multipathd
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Each time you boot the host, the empty
/etc/multipath.conf
zero-byte file automatically loads the NetApp recommended host multipath parameters as the default settings. You shouldn't need to make changes to the/etc/multipath.conf
file for your host because the operating system is compiled with the multipath parameters that recognize and manage ONTAP LUNs correctly.The following table shows the Linux OS native compiled multipath parameter settings for ONTAP LUNs.
Show parameter settings
Parameter Setting detect_prio
yes
dev_loss_tmo
"infinity"
failback
immediate
fast_io_fail_tmo
5
features
"2 pg_init_retries 50"
flush_on_last_del
"yes"
hardware_handler
"0"
no_path_retry
queue
path_checker
"tur"
path_grouping_policy
"group_by_prio"
path_selector
"service-time 0"
polling_interval
5
prio
"ontap"
product
LUN
retain_attached_hw_handler
yes
rr_weight
"uniform"
user_friendly_names
no
vendor
NETAPP
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Verify the parameter settings and path status for your ONTAP LUNs:
multipath -ll
The default multipath parameters support ASA, AFF, and FAS configurations. In these configurations, a single ONTAP LUN shouldn't require more than four paths. If there are more than four paths, it might cause issues with the paths during a storage failure.
The following example outputs show the correct parameter settings and path status for ONTAP LUNs in an ASA, AFF, or FAS configuration.
ASA configurationAn ASA configuration optimizes all paths to a given LUN, keeping them active. This improves performance by serving I/O operations through all paths at the same time.
# multipath -ll 3600a098038314c4a433f577471797958 dm-2 NETAPP,LUN C-Mode size=180G features='3 queue_if_no_path pg_init_retries 50' hwhandler='1 alua' wp=rw `-+- policy='service-time 0' prio=50 status=active |- 14:0:0:0 sdc 8:32 active ready running |- 17:0:0:0 sdas 66:192 active ready running |- 14:0:3:0 sdar 66:176 active ready running `- 17:0:3:0 sdch 69:80 active ready running
AFF or FAS configurationAn AFF or FAS configuration should have two groups of paths with higher and lower priorities. Higher priority Active/Optimized paths are served by the controller where the aggregate is located. Lower priority paths are active but non-optimized because they are served by a different controller. Non-optimized paths are only used when optimized paths aren’t available.
The following example displays the output for an ONTAP LUN with two Active/Optimized paths and two Active/Non-Optimized paths:
# multipath -ll 3600a0980383149764b5d567257516273 dm-0 NETAPP,LUN C-Mode size=150G features='3 queue_if_no_path pg_init_retries 50' hwhandler='1 alua' wp=rw |-+- policy='service-time 0' prio=50 status=active | |- 16:0:3:0 sdcg 69:64 active ready running | `- 10:0:0:0 sdb 8:16 active ready running `-+- policy='service-time 0' prio=10 status=enabled |- 10:0:1:0 sdc 8:32 active ready running `- 16:0:2:0 sdcf 69:48 active ready running
Step 4: Optionally, exclude a device from multipathing
If required, you can exclude a device from multipathing by adding the WWID for the unwanted device to the "blacklist" stanza for the multipath.conf
file.
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Determine the WWID:
# /lib/udev/scsi_id -gud /dev/sda
"sda" is the local SCSI disk that you want to add to the blacklist.
An example WWID is
360030057024d0730239134810c0cb833
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Add the WWID to the "blacklist" stanza:
blacklist { wwid 360030057024d0730239134810c0cb833 devnode "^(ram|raw|loop|fd|md|dm-|sr|scd|st)[0-9]*" devnode "^hd[a-z]" devnode "^cciss.*" }
Step 5: Customize multipath parameters for ONTAP LUNs
If your host is connected to LUNs from other vendors and any of the multipath parameter settings are overridden, you need to correct them by adding stanzas later in the multipath.conf
file that apply specifically to ONTAP LUNs. If you don't do this, the ONTAP LUNs might not work as expected.
Check your /etc/multipath.conf
file, especially in the defaults section, for settings that might be overriding the default settings for multipath parameters.
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You shouldn't override the recommended parameter settings for ONTAP LUNs. These settings are required for optimal performance of your host configuration. Contact NetApp support, your OS vendor, or both for more information. |
The following example shows how to correct an overridden default. In this example, the multipath.conf
file defines values for path_checker
and no_path_retry
that aren't compatible with ONTAP LUNs, and you can't remove these parameters because ONTAP storage arrays are still attached to the host. Instead, you correct the values for path_checker
and no_path_retry
by adding a device stanza to the multipath.conf
file that applies specifically to the ONTAP LUNs.
defaults { path_checker readsector0 no_path_retry fail } devices { device { vendor "NETAPP" product "LUN" no_path_retry queue path_checker tur } }
Step 6: Review the known issues
There are no known issues.
What's next?
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Learn about ASM mirroring.
Automatic Storage Management (ASM) mirroring might require changes to the Linux multipath settings to allow ASM to recognize a problem and switch over to an alternate failure group. Most ASM configurations on ONTAP use external redundancy, which means that data protection is provided by the external array and ASM doesn't mirror data. Some sites use ASM with normal redundancy to provide two-way mirroring, normally across different sites. See Oracle databases on ONTAP for further information.