diff -aurp open-iscsi-2.0-737/etc/iscsid.conf open-iscsi-2.0-737.work/etc/iscsid.conf --- open-iscsi-2.0-737/etc/iscsid.conf 2006-11-22 14:21:17.000000000 -0600 +++ open-iscsi-2.0-737.work/etc/iscsid.conf 2006-11-24 16:26:17.000000000 -0600 @@ -14,8 +14,8 @@ # To request that the iscsi initd scripts startup a session set to "automatic". # node.startup = automatic # -# To manually startup the session set to "manual". The default is manual. -node.startup = manual +# To manually startup the session set to "manual". The default is automatic. +node.startup = automatic # ************* # CHAP Settings diff -aurp open-iscsi-2.0-737/README open-iscsi-2.0-737.work/README --- open-iscsi-2.0-737/README 2006-11-22 14:32:55.000000000 -0600 +++ open-iscsi-2.0-737.work/README 2006-11-24 16:38:37.000000000 -0600 @@ -303,19 +303,10 @@ option. For example this would mount a i /dev/sdb /mnt/iscsi ext3 _netdev 0 0 -SUSE or Debian: ---------------- -Otherwise, if there is a initd script for your distro in etc/initd that -gets installed with "make install" - - /etc/init.d/open-iscsi start - -will usually get you started. - -Other: +Manual: ------ -If there is no initd script, you must start the tools by hand. First load the -iscsi modules with: +If there is no initd script or you wish to run iscsi manually, you must start +the tools by hand. First load the iscsi modules with: modprobe -q iscsi_tcp @@ -358,8 +349,6 @@ storage), it is better to automate the l 3. automate target logins for future system reboots --------------------------------------------------- -Note: this may only work for Red Hat, Fedora and SUSE configurations - To automate login to a node, use the following with the record ID of the node discovered in the discovery above: iscsiadm -m node -T targetname -p ip:port --op update -n node.conn[0].startup -v automatic @@ -372,7 +361,6 @@ all sessions add the following to the /e To login to all the automated nodes, simply restart the iscsi service e.g /etc/init.d/open-iscsi restart - 8. TBD ======