Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Fibre channel link down on booting Solaris server Post 303020015 by hicksd8 on Thursday 12th of July 2018 04:59:06 AM
Old 07-12-2018
Power failures can do damage, for example, the mains power could spike.

However, first thing to try is to re-seat the FC cable. Unplug and replug both ends.
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Fibre channel drivers on RS/6000 aix 5L

Want to configure IBM raid strorage but the aix 5L cds do not have the drivers for the fibre channels. The machine is RS/6000. I have gone to IBM downlaodable sites but i can't find the drivers? help pliz:mad: (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Zim-Aix-Guru
4 Replies

2. AIX

Power6 Virtual Fibre Channel Adapter

Hello, Searched in all IBM Redbooks and on the internet and couldn't find anything about the new feature of POWER 6 which Virtual Fibre ( Fiber ) channel adapter. It is similar to virtual scsi adapter. In my client partition I created the virtual Fibre Adapter mapped it with the VIO... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: filosophizer
1 Replies

3. Solaris

USCSICMD ioctl calls for Fibre Channel(FC) devices on Solaris 10?

Hi , I have wrtitten a C program that issues USCSICMD ioctl call to the tape devices attached on solaris sparc 10. I was able to get the required information from all SCSI tape devices attached using the utility. But, whenever it is run on FC attached tape drives , the program returns an error... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: naveen448
0 Replies

4. Hardware

Fibre Channel HBA recommendations?

We will be buying new Xeon E5-based servers for our datacenter and were wondering which Fibre Channel host bus adapters we should select for these. The choices are Emulex or QLogic (8Gb FC HBAs). Anybody have any recommendations on which is the better choice? Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: atahmass
1 Replies

5. AIX

[ASK] - AIX Fibre Channel behavior

Hello all, Let me introduce about the context and my environment. We have an AIX 6.1 system, it has 4 FC channels / > lsdev -Cc adapter | grep fcs fcs0 Available 23-T1 Virtual Fibre Channel Client Adapter fcs1 Available 23-T1 Virtual Fibre Channel Client Adapter fcs2 Available 23-T1... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: Phat
14 Replies

6. Solaris

Fibre Channel link not ready on Netra 240

Hi, One of my Netra 240 went into hung state and I had to reboot it. I powered it off and tried booting it again but unsuccessful. It is not connected to SAN and have local disks. Not able to boot in failsafe mode too. There are two disks of 72GB, both are mirrored in SVM. It complains about... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
5 Replies

7. Solaris

Issue with Fiber Channel cards in Solaris

hi everone i am experiencing disconnectivity from storage to My database machines. i have doubt on my FC cards in my sparc T4-2 machines. i want to know how should i check from my solaris that whether the cards are ok or not because once the disks get disconnect from SAN so it come back again but... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: janakors
5 Replies
pm_trans_check(9F)					   Kernel Functions for Drivers 					pm_trans_check(9F)

NAME
pm_trans_check - Device power cycle advisory check SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/sunddi.h> int pm_trans_check(struct pm_trans_data *datap, time_t *intervalp); INTERFACE LEVEL
Solaris DDI specific (Solaris DDI) PARAMETERS
datap Pointer to a pm_trans_data structure intervalp Pointer to time difference when next power cycle will be advised DESCRIPTION
The pm_trans_check() function checks if a power-cycle is currently advised based on data in the pm_trans_data structure. This function is provided to prevent damage to devices from excess power cycles; drivers for devices that are sensitive to the number of power cycles should call pm_trans_check() from their power(9E) function before powering-off a device. If pm_trans_check() indicates that the device should not be power cycled, the driver should not attempt to power cycle the device and should fail the call to power(9E) entry point. If pm_trans_check() returns that it is not advised to power cycle the device, it attempts to calculate when the next power cycle is advised, based on the supplied parameters. In such case, intervalp returns the time difference (in seconds) from the current time to when the next power cycle is advised. If the time for the next power cycle cannot be determined, intervalp indicates 0. To avoid excessive calls to the power(9E) entry point during a period when power cycling is not advised, the driver should mark the corre- sponding device component busy for the intervalp time period (if interval is not 0). Conveniently, the driver can utilize the fact that calls to pm_busy_component(9F) are stacked. If power cycling is not advised, the driver can call pm_busy_component(9F) and issue a time- out(9F) for the intervalp time. The timeout() handler can issue the corresponding pm_idle_component(9F) call. When the format field of pm_trans_data is set to DC_SCSI_FORMAT, the caller must provide valid data in svc_date[], lifemax, and ncycles. Currently, flag must be set to 0. struct pm_scsi_cycles { int lifemax; /* lifetime max power cycles */ int ncycles; /* number of cycles so far */ char svc_date[DC_SCSI_MFR_LEN]; /* service date YYYYWW */ int flag; /* reserved for future */ }; struct pm_trans_data { int format; /* data format */ union { struct pm_scsi_cycles scsi_cycles; } un; }; RETURN VALUES
1 Power cycle is advised 0 Power cycle is not advised -1 Error due to invalid argument. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Committed | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
power.conf(4), attributes(5), power(9E) Writing Device Drivers Using Power Management SunOS 5.11 16 Oct 1999 pm_trans_check(9F)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:14 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy