Hp 5130 Switch Firmware Upgrade < Trusted >

Boot ROM 1.36 Copyright (c) 2010-2018 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Loading the main image... The line freezes for 45 seconds. This is the "sweaty palm" zone. Do not power cycle the switch. Do not breathe on it. The 5130 is rewriting its own soul.

Suddenly:

Or, “How I learned to stop worrying and love the BootROM.” The Prologue: The Switch That Saw Too Much Let’s be honest. The HP 5130 (now technically an HPE/Aruba brand) is the diesel pickup truck of the networking world. It’s not flashy. It doesn’t have a fancy cloud dashboard. But for the last decade, it has been silently routing packets in a dusty closet, running on a firmware version that remembers when Obama was president.

System is starting... Press Ctrl+D to access BASIC-BOOTWARE menu... You ignore that. Ten seconds later, the login prompt appears. You log in. hp 5130 switch firmware upgrade

The HP 5130 Resurrection: Why Firmware Upgrades Feel Like Black Magic (And How to Do It Without Bricking Your Network)

Happy upgrading. May your latency be low and your checksums match.

Actually, no—it usually keeps it. But sometimes, the new firmware deprecates a command. Your fancy ACL that worked on version 5.20 might crash version 7.10. Boot ROM 1

But you are a professional. You do this:

You did it. You monster. Here is the dirty secret: Upgrading the firmware wipes your config if you didn't save it.

The 5130 has a USB port. Copy the .ipe to a FAT32 USB stick, plug it into the switch, and type copy usb0:/firmware.ipe flash:/ . It’s faster and less likely to corrupt. Act III: The Surgery (The Boot Loader Whispers) Here is where most guides lie to you. They say: "Just type boot-loader." Do not power cycle the switch

The system is going to reboot. Continue? [Y/N]: As the switch reboots, the fans spin up to jet-engine volume. The console floods with hex codes. You see:

Now, the scary part:

display version HPE Comware Software, Version 7.10.R3238

tftp 192.168.1.100 get 5130_24G_4SFP_7.10.R3238.ipe The cursor blinks. This is where you contemplate your life choices. A 30MB file over 100Mbps Ethernet takes 5 seconds. Over a slow TFTP transfer because your laptop is on WiFi? It takes an eternity.