You can use the command-line interface (CLI) to configure
the system to authenticate with iSCSI-attached hosts by using the Challenge-Handshake
Authentication Protocol (CHAP).
After the CHAP is set for the system, all attached hosts must be configured to authenticate.
When you are troubleshooting a problem, you can delay your configuration of the CHAP
authentication until after you configure the first one or two hosts and test their connectivity.
About this task
To configure authentication between the system
and the iSCSI-attached hosts, follow these steps:
Procedure
-
To configure CHAP authentication for an iSCSI
host, enter the following CLI command:
chhost -iscsiusername iscsi_username -chapsecret chap_secret host_name
Where iscsi_username is the user
name, chap_secret is the CHAP secret to be used to authenticate the
system via iSCSI, and host_name is the name of the iSCSI host. The
chap_secret value must be 12 characters. If you do not specify the
iSCSI user name, the initiator's IQN is taken as the user name for one-way CHAP
authentication.
-
To set the authentication method for the iSCSI
communications of the system, enter the following CLI command:
chsystem -iscsiauthmethod chap -chapsecret chap_secret
Where
chap specifies that CHAP is the authentication method and
chap_secret is the CHAP secret to be used. The specified CHAP secret
cannot begin or end with a space.
-
To clear all CHAP secrets for iSCSI
authentication that were previously set, enter the following CLI command:
chsystem -nochapsecret
If the
chapsecret
parameter is specified, the
nochapsecret parameter is not
allowed.
-
Run the lsiscsiauth command to display the Challenge Handshake
Authentication Protocol (CHAP) secret that you configured.
What to do next
After you configure the CHAP secret for
the system, ensure that the system CHAP secret is added to each iSCSI-attached host. On all
iSCSI-attached hosts, specify a CHAP secret that the hosts use to authenticate to the
system.