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Full Discussion: Detect New Disk in Red Hat
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Detect New Disk in Red Hat Post 302721559 by Scott on Thursday 25th of October 2012 02:13:14 PM
Old 10-25-2012
Yes!

Actually, there's an answer in the "similar posts" section at the bottom of the page, as you read this.

Detect the lun

(it's post 4. You just need to know which SCSI bus the disk is on)
 

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tgt-setup-lun(8)					      System Manager's Manual						  tgt-setup-lun(8)

NAME
tgt-setup-lun - creates a target, adds a device to the target and defines initiators that can connect to the target SYNOPSIS
tgt-setup-lun -d device -n target_name [initiator_IP1 initiator_IP2 ...] [-h] DESCRIPTION
Starts tgtd if necessary and creates a target according to the supplied target_name. The format of the target name is as follows: iqn.2001-04.com.<hostname>-<target_name> The target name must be unique. The script then adds the requested device to the target. If specific IP addresses are defined, it adds them to the list of allowed initia- tors for that target. If no IP addresses is defined, it defines that the target accepts any initiator. EXAMPLES
Create a target that uses /dev/sdb1 and allows connections only from 192.168.10.81: tgt-setup-lun -d /dev/sdb1 -n my_target 192.168.10.81 Create a target that uses /dev/sdb1 and allows connections only from 192.168.10.81 and 192.168.10.82: tgt-setup-lun -d /dev/sdb1 -n my_target 192.168.10.81 192.168.10.82 Create a target that uses /dev/sdb1 and allows connections from any initiator: tgt-setup-lun -d /dev/sdb1 -n my_target Display help: tgt-setup-lun -h AUTHOR
Written by Erez Zilber REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <erezz@voltaire.com>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) Voltaire Ltd. 2008. tgt-setup-lun(8)
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