HP Visualize J5000 hp Visualize J5000, J7000 workstations service handbook (a4 - Page 200
Assigning NSE SCSI Device IDs, CAUTION
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SCSI Connections Assigning SCSI Device IDs ctl 1 10/0/15/0.7.0 sctl CLAIMED ext_bus 3 10/0/15/1 SCSI Dual Port c720 CLAIMED target 2 10/0/15/1.6 tgt CLAIMED disk 0 10/0/15/1.6.0 sdisk ST39102LC CLAIMED target 3 10/0/15/1.7 tgt CLAIMED ctl 2 10/0/15/1.7.0 sctl CLAIMED ba 2 10/1 - ROPEtoPCI ROPEtoPCI CLAIMED ba 3 10/2 - ROPEtoPCI ROPEtoPCI CLAIMED ba 4 10/4 - ROPEtoPCI ROPEtoPCI CLAIMED ba 5 10/6 - ROPEtoPCI ROPEtoPCI CLAIMED processor 0 32 processor CLAIMED processor 1 34 processor CLAIMED DEVICE INTERFACE Initiator Ultra2 Wide DEVICE DEVICE SEAGATE DEVICE DEVICE BUS_NEXUS Initiator PCI Bus Bridge BUS_NEXUS PCI Bus Bridge BUS_NEXUS PCI Bus Bridge BUS_NEXUS PCI Bus Bridge PROCESSOR PROCESSOR Processor Processor Assigning NSE SCSI Device IDs You can determine which NSE SCSI devices are currently in use by looking under the H/W Path heading in the output from the ioscan command. The entry 10/0/15/0 is the built-in NSE SCSI bus. For devices connected to the built-in NSE SCSI bus, such as disks, the number between the two decimals and after the third "/" in the hardware path specifies the SCSI ID for that device. For example, a hardware path of 10/0/15/0.2.0 specifies an NSE SCSI device at SCSI ID 2. Here is the breakdown of the hardware path: SCSI device 10/0/15/0.2.0 NSE SCSI 10/0/15/0.2.0 SCSI ID 2 10/0/15/0.2.0 CAUTION Do not use SCSI device ID 7 for any device. It is reserved for the built-in SCSI bus controller. 196 Appendix C