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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Allocating Unallocated Drive Space from a SAN to a filesystem Post 302887751 by cjcox on Monday 10th of February 2014 03:54:17 PM
Old 02-10-2014
Often times you expose a new LUN which serves as the device for the filesystem. Then the OS just needs to scan and find the new LUN. IBM does make devices that portray more physical defined objects (looking like DASD) though. Hard to give specifics without knowing more about your SAN env (especially the storage unit).
 

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scsa1394(7D)							      Devices							      scsa1394(7D)

NAME
scsa1394 - SCSI to 1394 bridge driver SYNOPSIS
unit@GUID DESCRIPTION
The scsa1394 driver is a 1394 target and an SCSA HBA driver that supports 1394 mass storage devices compliant with the Serial Bus Protocol 2 (SBP-2) specification. It supports both bus-powered and self-powered 1394 mass storage devices. The scsa1394 nexus driver maps SCSA target driver requests to SBP-2 Operation Request Blocks (ORB's). The scsa1394 driver creates a child device info node for each logical unit (LUN) on the mass storage device. The standard Solaris SCSI disk driver is attached to those nodes. Refer to sd(7D). This driver supports multiple LUN devices and creates a separate child device info node for each LUN. All child LUN nodes attach to sd(7D). All 1394 mass storage devices are treated as removable media devices. A 1394 mass storage device can be managed by rmformat(1). With or without Volume Manager, you can mount, eject, hot remove and hot insert a 1394 mass storage device, as the following sections explain. Using Volume Management Mass storage devices are managed by Volume Manager. vold(1M) creates a device nickname which can be listed with eject(1). The device is mounted using volrmmount(1) under /rmdisk/label. See volrmmount(1) to unmount the device and eject(1) to eject the media. If the device is ejected while it is mounted, vold(1M) unmounts the device before ejecting it. It also kills any active applications that are accessing the device. Hot removing a mass storage device with vold(1M) active fails with a console warning. To hot remove or insert a 1394 storage device, first stop vold(1M) by issuing the command /etc/init.d/volmgt stop. After the device has been removed or inserted, restart vold(1M) by issuing the command /etc/init.d/volmgt start. You can also permanently disable vold for removable devices by commenting out the rmscsi line in vold.conf. See the System Administration Guide, Volume I and Solaris Common Desktop Environment: User's Guide for details on how to manage a removable device with CDE and Removable Media Manager. See dtfile.1X under CDE for information on how to use Removable Media Manager. USING
mount(1M) AND umount(1M) Use mount(1M) to mount the device and umount(1M) to unmount the device. Use eject(1) to eject the media. Because vold(1M) is disabled, no vold nicknames can be used. Removing the storage device while it is being accessed or mounted fails with a console warning. To hot remove the storage device from the system, unmount the file system, then kill all applications accessing the device. Next, hot remove the device. A storage device can be hot inserted at any time. For a comprehensive listing of (non-bootable) 1394 mass-storage devices that are compatible with this driver, see www.sun.com/io. DEVICE SPECIAL FILES
Block special file names are located in /dev/dsk. Raw file names are located in /dev/rdsk. Input/output requests to the devices must follow the same restrictions as those for SCSI disks. Refer to sd(7D). IOCTLS
Refer to cdio(7I) and dkio(7I). ERRORS
Refer to sd(7D). FILES
The device special files for the 1394 mass storage device are created like those for a SCSI disk. Refer to sd(7D). /dev/dsk/cntndnsn Block files /dev/rdsk/cntndnsn Raw files /vol/dev/aliases/rmdisk0 Symbolic link to the character device for the media in removable drive 0. This is a generic removable media device. /kernel/drv/scsa1394 32-bit x86 ELF kernel module /kernel/drv/amd64/scsa1394 64-bit x86 ELF kernel module /kernel/drv/sparcv9/scsa1394 64-bit SPARC ELF kernel module ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for a description of the following attributes: +-----------------------+-------------------------------+ |ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE +-----------------------+-------------------------------+ |Architecture | SPARC, x86, PCI-based systems | +-----------------------+-------------------------------+ |Availability | SUNWscsa1394 | +-----------------------+-------------------------------+ SEE ALSO
cdrw(1), eject(1), rmformat(1), volrmmount(1), cfgadm_scsi(1M), fdisk(1M), mount(1M), umount(1M), vold(1M), dtfile.1X, scsi(4), attributes(5), hci1394(7D), sd(7D), pcfs(7FS), cdio(7I), dkio(7I) IEEE Std 1394-1995 Standard for a High Performance Serial Bus ANSI NCITS 325-1998 - Serial Bus Protocol 2 (SBP-2) System Administration Guide: Devices and File Systems Solaris Common Desktop Environment: User's Guide http://www.sun.com/io SunOS 5.10 9 Oct 2004 scsa1394(7D)
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