Cisco Systems OL-25712-04 Security Camera User Manual


 
Procedure
Step 1
In the Navigation pane, click the Equipment tab.
Step 2
On the Equipment tab, expand Equipment > Chassis > Chassis Number > Servers.
Step 3
Choose the server for which you want to view the actual BIOS settings.
Step 4
On the Work pane, click the Inventory tab.
Step 5
Click the Motherboard subtab.
Step 6
In the BIOS Settings area, click the Expand icon to the right of the heading to open that area.
Each tab in the BIOS Settings area displays the settings for that server platform. Some of the tabs contain
subtabs with additional information.
Configuring IPMI Access Profiles
IPMI Access Profile
This policy allows you to determine whether IPMI commands can be sent directly to the server, using the IP
address. For example, you can send commands to retrieve sensor data from the CIMC. This policy defines
the IPMI access, including a username and password that can be authenticated locally on the server, and
whether the access is read-only or read-write.
You must include this policy in a service profile and that service profile must be associated with a server for
it to take effect.
Creating an IPMI Access Profile
Before You Begin
An IPMI profile requires that one or more of the following resources already exist in the system:
• Username with appropriate permissions that can be authenticated by the operating system of the server
• Password for the username
• Permissions associated with the username
Procedure
Step 1
In the Navigation pane, click the Servers tab.
Step 2
On the Servers tab, expand Servers > Policies.
Step 3
Expand the node for the organization where you want to create the policy.
If the system does not include multitenancy, expand the root node.
Step 4
Right-click IPMI Profiles and select Create IPMI Profiles.
Step 5
In the Create IPMI Profile dialog box:
Cisco UCS Manager GUI Configuration Guide, Release 2.0
OL-25712-04 405
Configuring IPMI Access Profiles