Hi I am just starting to play around with HP Intergrated Lights-Out but have run into a problem opening the web interface when the ILO IP address is the same as the server IP and the server is already running IIS. If possible, I would prefer to use the same IP address for ILO as the server but I cant figure out how to make this work. With 2 different IPs, and using a shared port, browsing to the web interface is straight forward. Same IP on server, shared port, not running IIS also works without a problem but as soon as I'm on the IIS server that has ILO setup with the same IP then IIS steps in and I get the 'under construction page.' The other HP management web interfaces work without a problem but the link is included in the HP menus - ie - = I have been looking through support sites and forums but still cant find a solution:(. If you are reluctant to go to linux, you can go with a WAMP solution (Windows, Apache, Mysql, PHP). This will run under a Windows OS of your choice. Aug 09, 2010 I have tried to access the ILO from multiple browsers on multiple machines (Win2003, Win2008, XP, Mac(!)) to try to eliminate any weird ActiveX or Java issues. I have checked the keyboard input and it works: I can get into setup by pressing F9, configure the iLO by using F8, etc. The VPS solution just gives you a box on the internet to use and load any OS you desire. Unless this is a complex web site you might also want to look into a web content manager like Wordpress, Joomla, or Drupal. So you don't have to build all of the bits yourself. You can focus on the content and let the web content manager deal with the web design. And finally the selection of the web site should be dictated by the tools you will use to create it. ![]() If you will create the web site with.Net then LAMP/WAMP is probably not the best choice. Paragraph wrote: hutchingsp wrote: Paragraph wrote: iLO should be running off it's own management port, not a standard network jack. I think on some of the entry level servers they still have a shared physical iLo/NIC port, but AFAIK that's just the hardware, the actual iLO is still configured/managed as if it were a dedicated interface. Outlook for mac add contacts from email. @OP Just look on the back of the server, you should see a network port marked 'iLO' or 'iLO 2', make sure that port is plugged in to a network switch. Then, follow directions We're on iLO4 now! Thanks for the quick replies. I was using the shared NIC port option and would have liked the ILO management IP to be the same as the server IP if only for keeping things neat and easy. I was hoping I could somehow change the ports used/required and get it to work, as IIS is not using standard ports for any web applications. A seperate subnet with mirrored IPs would be as good and it will actually work the way it was designed to. Combined with the upcoming Spiceworks ILO integration, this will make a huge improvement on the current support abilities. Scott Alan Miller wrote: Paragraph wrote: hutchingsp wrote: Paragraph wrote: iLO should be running off it's own management port, not a standard network jack. I think on some of the entry level servers they still have a shared physical iLo/NIC port, but AFAIK that's just the hardware, the actual iLO is still configured/managed as if it were a dedicated interface. @OP Just look on the back of the server, you should see a network port marked 'iLO' or 'iLO 2', make sure that port is plugged in to a network switch. Then, follow directions We're on iLO4 now!
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