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Chapter 8: Nodes, Node Groups, and Interfaces 
 
78
 
 
Node Names 
Node names must be unique. CC-SG will prompt you with options if you 
attempt to manually add a node with an existing node name. When CC-
SG automatically adds nodes, a numbering system ensures that node 
names are unique. 
See 
Naming Conventions
 (on page 353) for details on CC-SG's rules 
for name lengths. 
 
About Interfaces 
In CC-SG, nodes are accessed through interfaces. You must add at least 
one interface to each new node. You can add different types of 
interfaces to provide different kinds of access, such as Out-of-Band KVM 
or serial, power control, In-Band SSH/RSA/VNC, DRAC/RSA/ILO, web, 
or Telnet access, depending on the node type. 
A node can have multiple interfaces, but only one out-of-band serial or 
KVM interface. For example, a Windows Server may have an out-of-
band KVM interface for the keyboard, mouse, and monitor ports, and a 
power interface to manage the outlet to which the server is connected. 
Some interfaces only work in Direct mode even though you configure 
CC-SG to use Proxy mode. These interfaces include ILO, RSA, DRAC, 
Web Browser and VMware Viewer. See 
About Connection Modes
 (on 
page 219). 
 
Viewing Nodes 
In CC-SG, you can view all nodes in the Nodes tab and select a node to 
view its specific Node Profile. 
 
Nodes Tab 
When you click the Nodes tab, all nodes to which you have access 
appear in a tree structure.  
Nodes are displayed alphabetically by name or grouped by their 
availability status. Nodes grouped by availability status are sorted 
alphabetically within their availability grouping. To switch between sorting 
methods, right-click the tree, click Node Sorting Options, then click By 
Node Name or By Node Status. 
See 
Custom Views for Devices and Nodes
 (on page 154) for details 
on viewing the Nodes tab in different ways.