3 creating a psp dependency script – HP Insight Control Software for Linux User Manual

Page 136

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1

This agent is installed on servers with iLO 4 management processors. While HP SIM requires hp-ams so that it can use

embedded features of the iLO 4 management processor, Insight Control for Linux does not use it. If you want to use only
the hp-ams agent on your iLO 4–based servers, you must manually remove the other agents.

The Agentless Management Service (AMS) will be responsible for sending all host operating system-specific to the iLO
4 firmware.

NOTE:

The RPMs for these PSPs are OS- and platform-specific and are named as such, for

example, the HP ProLiant Channel Interface for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 (x86_64).

13.3 Creating a PSP dependency script

Some utilities contained in the PSP have RPM dependencies that must be met for them to install
correctly. These dependencies are documented in the HP ProLiant Support Pack User Guide.

TIP:

For instructions on how to obtain the HP ProLiant Support Pack User Guide, see

Section 26.7.2

(page 250)

.

Insight Control for Linux does not automatically resolve these dependencies. If you plan to install
a PSP on your managed systems, you must ensure that the required RPMs are installed first.
Otherwise, the PSP installation fails

One way to solve this problem is to install the appropriate packages at installation time. If you are
using Insight Control for Linux installation tools to install your managed system, you can simply
modify the Kickstart or AutoYaST file and add the required packages to the list of software to be
installed.

If the managed system is already installed, Insight Control for Linux provides a mechanism called
a

PSP dependency script

, which can automatically install required RPMs on a managed system

just before a PSP is installed.

PSP dependency scripts are shell scripts that are run as part of the Deploy

→Deploy Drivers,

Firmware, and Agents

→Install ProLiant Support Pack (PSP)... task.

For a PSP dependency script to be called during the PSP installation process, you must register it;
it appears in the /opt/repository/pspscript/example_dependency.sh directory on
the

CMS

. A

remote repository

cannot host a PSP dependency script.

You must use the default example_dependency.sh script in the /opt/repository/
pspscript/example_dependency.sh

directory as a template for your customized script,

which you must register. Do not modify the example_dependency.sh script. The default
example_dependency.sh

script does not perform any actual tasks. It only contains comments

with helpful suggestions about how to create a real dependency script.

Remember that the items in the Insight Control for Linux

repository

are served to the managed

systems through HTTP over the default repository web server port (usually port 60000). Therefore,
in your dependency script, include code to install required packages directly from the repository
web server.

Example 4

provides an example of a simple PSP dependency script that installs the kernel-devel

RPM for RHEL4 Update 6 from the repository web server located at IP address 172.0.0.4. This
script assumes that RHEL4 U6 was already registered and copied to the repository.

Example 4 Simple PSP dependency script

#!/bin/sh
# Install the required RPM
rpm -i
http//172.0.0.4:60000/os/RHEL4ESU6-x64/RedHat/RPMS/kernel-devel-2.6.9-67.EL.x86_64.rpm
# Exit with 0 status - a non zero status will generate an error
exit 0

136

Installing PSPs on managed systems

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