Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Sunblade 1500 hba installation Post 302378703 by DukeNuke2 on Tuesday 8th of December 2009 02:24:56 PM
Old 12-08-2009
how have you done the reboot with -r option? please give the full command.

can you see the LUN/LUNs from the T3 in the "format" output?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Moving to Solaris 10 on a SunBlade 1500

I am using a SunBlade 1500 that currently runs Solaris 8 and I would like to install Solaris 10. This workstation has 1Gbyte of memory, 1 GigEthernet card and one 80Gbyte ATA drive. Soon a 2nd 80Gbyte drive will be installed. Are there any 'interesting' points I need to watch for in the... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: miket
9 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

SunBlade 1500 SCSI Floppy Jumpstart

Hello :) I have a customer who is OEMing their own hadware to us. The CPU is right out of a SunBlade 1500. Because of the physical requirements, the keyboard, DVD-ROM drive, 36GB Removable disk drive and scsi floppy are housed in what they call their media box which is in some cases 10 feet from... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rambo15
0 Replies

3. Solaris

Solaris 9 Installation on Sunblade 100

I have a sunblade 100. It is preloaded with Solaris 8 but I do not have root password. I want to erase and install Solaris 9 on it. What are my options? I have a CD ROM. Could any one help me in getting started to install in from CDs? Appreciate your help guyz. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: stevelrf
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Noob, 1500 static pages to columns

Hi, My name is Mike and I am new here, perhaps the "1 post" gave me away, I have a small problem. I know some very minor UNIX and VI and study hard to get better, this time I took upon myself a task just right above my level, I hope to get two things out of this post 1) some advise to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lawstudent
3 Replies

5. Solaris

usb flash on solaris 8 sunblade 1500 server

I would like to know how to mount and acess USB flash memory /drive on sun blade 1500 operating solaris 8 thanks in advance (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Blue_shadow
5 Replies

6. Solaris

Sun blade 1500 installation and administration problem

Hi I'm completely new in solaris,and don't know many about it. I was installed solaris 10 on sun blade 1500,and also I need to install oracle on it. Now I stuck on some thing and i'm sure that you help me. When i started Oracle installation system told me that I don't have enogh swap space.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dirtyjack
1 Replies

7. Solaris

How to enable hba port of a two port hba card

Hi, i have a two port hba card in solaris 10 system one of which is disabled. How to enable and configure the other port. ---------- Post updated at 08:17 AM ---------- Previous update was at 03:40 AM ---------- please help :( (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: rishiraaz
7 Replies

8. Hardware

Nic Card for SunBlade 1500 Tower

Hi, I bought a server Sunblade 1500, and I would like to install a nic card. Anyone know any compatible network card for this server? Regards (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ph0b0s
1 Replies

9. AIX

cp 1500+ Files

Hello, I need to copy 1500+ files (total of 170mb) from our /tmp/directory to a different directory /application/program/files I issue the command: user@host> cp * /application/program/files I am getting the follwing error: ksh: /usr/bin/cp: arg list too long being new to aix, I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jeffs42885
6 Replies

10. UNIX Benchmarks

Blade 1500 Silver

CPU/Speed: UltraSPARC-IIIi/1.5Ghz Ram: 1GB Motherboard: Sparc Bus: PCI Cache: Controller: Disk: ATA Load: 1 user Kernel: SunOS 5.10 Generic_137111-02 Kernel ELF?: yes pgms: gcc 2.95.3 compiled BYTE UNIX Benchmarks (Version 3.11) System -- SunOS aachen95 5.10... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: MadeInGermany
0 Replies
SG_LUNS(8)							     SG3_UTILS								SG_LUNS(8)

NAME
sg_luns - send SCSI REPORT LUNS command or decode given LUN SYNOPSIS
sg_luns [--decode] [--help] [--hex] [--linux] [--maxlen=LEN] [--quiet] [--raw] [--select=SR] [--verbose] [--version] DEVICE sg_luns --test=ALUN [--hex] [--verbose] DESCRIPTION
In the first form shown in the SYNOPSIS this utility sends the SCSI REPORT LUNS command to the DEVICE and outputs the response. The response should be a list of LUNs ("a LUN inventory") for the I_T nexus associated with the DEVICE. Roughly speaking that is all LUNs that share the target device that the REPORT LUNS command is sent through. In the SPC-3 and SPC-4 SCSI standards support for the REPORT LUNS command is mandatory. When the --test=ALUN option is given (the second form in the SYNOPSIS), then the ALUN value is decoded as outlined in SAM-3, SAM-4 and SAM-5 (revision 13, section 4.7) . Where required below the first form shown in the SYNOPSIS is called "device mode" and the second form is called "test mode". OPTIONS
Arguments to long options are mandatory for short options as well. -d, --decode decode LUNs into their component parts, as described in the LUN section of SAM-3, SAM-4 and SAM-5. -h, --help output the usage message then exit. -H, --hex [device mode] when given once this utility will output the SCSI response (i.e. the data-out buffer) to the REPORT LUNS command in ASCII hex then exit. When given twice it causes --decode to output component fields in hex rather than decimal. -H, --hex [test mode] when this option is given, then decoded component fields of ALUN are output in hex. -l, --linux this option is only available in Linux. After the T10 representation of each 64 bit LUN (in 16 hexadecimal digits), if this option is given then to the right, in square brackets, is the Linux LUN integer in decimal. If the --hex option is given twice (e.g. -HH) as well then the Linux LUN integer is output in hexadecimal. -m, --maxlen=LEN where LEN is the (maximum) response length in bytes. It is placed in the cdb's "allocation length" field. If not given (or LEN is zero) then 8192 is used. The maximum allowed value of LEN is 1048576. -q, --quiet output only the ASCII hex rendering of each report LUN, one per line. Without the --quiet option, there is header information printed before the LUN listing. -r, --raw output the SCSI response (i.e. the data-out buffer) in binary (to stdout). -s, --select=SR this option sets the SELECT REPORT field (SR) in the SCSI REPORT LUNS command. The default value is 0. For detailed information see the REPORT LUNS command in SPC (most recent is SPC-4 revision 36e in section 6.33). To simplify, for the I_T nexus associated with the DEVICE, the meanings of the SR values defined to date for SPC-4 are: 0 : all LUNs excluding well known logical units 1 : well known logical units 2 : all LUNs Values between 0xf8 and 0xff (inclusive) are vendor specific (SPC-4 rev 36e), other values greater than 2 are reserved. This utility will accept any value between 0 and 255 (0xff) for SR . -t, --test=ALUN ALUN is assumed to be a hexadecimal number in ASCII hex or the letter 'L' followed by a decimal number (see below). The hexadecimal number can be up to 64 bits in size (i.e. 16 hexadecimal digits) and is padded to the right if less than 16 hexadecimal digits are given (e.g. --test=0122003a represents T10 LUN 0122003a00000000). ALUN may be prefixed by '0x' or '0X' (e.g. the previous example could have been --test=0x0122003a). ALUN may also be given with spaces or tabs between each byte (or other grouping) but then ALUN would need to be surrounded by single or double quotes. In the decimal number case (i.e. following a 'L') that number is assumed to be a Linux "word flipped" LUN which is converted into a T10 LUN representation and printed. In both cases the number is interpreted as a LUN and decoded as if the --decode option had been given. Also when ALUN is a hexadecimal number it can have a trailing 'L' in which case the corresponding Linux "word flipped" LUN value is output. The LUN is decoded in all cases. -v, --verbose increase the level of verbosity, (i.e. debug output). -V, --version print the version string and then exit. NOTES
The SCSI REPORT LUNS command is important for Logical Unit (LU) discovery. After a target device is discovered (usually via some transport specific mechanism), a REPORT LUNS command should either be sent to LUN 0 (which is Peripheral device addressing method with bus_id=0 and target/lun=0) or to the REPORT LUNS well known LUN (i.e. 0xc101000000000000). SAM-5 requires that one of these responds with an inventory of LUNS that are contained in this target device. In test mode, if the --hex option is given once then in the decoded output, some of the component fields are printed in hex with leading zeros. The leading zeros are to indicate the size of the component field. For example: in the Peripheral device addressing method (16 bits overall), the bus ID is 6 bits wide and the target/LUN field is 8 bits wide; so both are shown with two hex digits (e.g. bus_id=0x02, tar- get=0x3a). EXAMPLES
Typically by the time user space programs get to run, SCSI LUs have been discovered. In Linux the lsscsi utility lists the LUs that are currently present. The LUN of a device (LU) is the fourth element in the tuple at the beginning of each line. Below we see a target (or "I_T Nexus": "6:0:0") has two LUNS: 1 and 49409. If 49409 is converted into T10 LUN format it is 0xc101000000000000 which is the REPORT LUNS well known LUN. # lsscsi -g [6:0:0:1] disk Linux scsi_debug 0004 /dev/sdb /dev/sg1 [6:0:0:49409]wlun Linux scsi_debug 0004 - /dev/sg2 We could send a REPORT LUNS command to either /dev/sdb, /dev/sg1 or /dev/sg2 and get the same result. Below we use /dev/sg1 : # sg_luns /dev/sg1 Lun list length = 8 which imples 1 lun entry Report luns [select_report=0x0]: 0001000000000000 That is a bit noisy so cut down the clutter with --quiet: # sg_luns -q /dev/sg1 0001000000000000 Now decode that LUN into its component parts: # sg_luns -d -q /dev/sg1 0001000000000000 Peripheral device addressing: lun=1 Would like to see how wide that component LUN field is: # sg_luns -d -q -HH /dev/sg1 0001000000000000 Peripheral device addressing: lun=0x01 So it is 8 bits wide (actually between 5 and 8 bits wide, inclusive). Now use --select=1 to find out if there are any well known LUNs: # sg_luns -q -s 1 /dev/sg1 c101000000000000 So how many LUNs do we have all together (associated with the current I_T Nexus): # sg_luns -q -s 2 /dev/sg1 0001000000000000 c101000000000000 # sg_luns -q -s 2 -d /dev/sg1 0001000000000000 Peripheral device addressing: lun=1 c101000000000000 REPORT LUNS well known logical unit The following example uses the --linux option and is not available in other operating systems. The extra number in square brackets is the Linux version of T10 LUN shown at the start of the line. # sg_luns -q -s 2 -l /dev/sg1 0001000000000000 [1] c101000000000000 [49409] Now we use the --test= option to decode LUNS input on the command line (rather than send a REPORT LUNS command and act on the response): # sg_luns --test=0001000000000000 Decoded LUN: Peripheral device addressing: lun=1 # sg_luns --test="c1 01" Decoded LUN: REPORT LUNS well known logical unit # sg_luns -t 0x023a004b -H Decoded LUN: Peripheral device addressing: bus_id=0x02, target=0x3a >>Second level addressing: Peripheral device addressing: lun=0x4b The next example is Linux specific as we try to find out what the Linux LUN 49409 translates to in the T10 world: # sg_luns --test=L49409 64 bit LUN in T10 preferred (hex) format: c1 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 Decoded LUN: REPORT LUNS well known logical unit And the mapping between T10 and Linux LUN representations can be done the other way: # sg_luns -t c101L Linux 'word flipped' integer LUN representation: 49409 Decoded LUN: REPORT LUNS well known logical unit EXIT STATUS
The exit status of sg_luns is 0 when it is successful. Otherwise see the sg3_utils(8) man page. AUTHORS
Written by Douglas Gilbert. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <dgilbert at interlog dot com>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2004-2013 Douglas Gilbert This software is distributed under a FreeBSD license. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PUR- POSE. SEE ALSO
sg_inq(8) sg3_utils-1.36 May 2013 SG_LUNS(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:16 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy