HP Workstation xw6000 Adaptec SCSI RAID 2120S: Software Reference Guide - Page 35
boolean, integer, FALSE, readonly, readonly=TRUE - 64 bit
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Syntax and Conventions for CLI Commands boolean A boolean has a value of either TRUE or FALSE and can be specified with any of the following key words: ■ TRUE can be specified with TRUE, 1, ON, or YES. For switches, you can also specify TRUE by using the switch without any switch value. For example, /readonly and / readonly=TRUE are identical. ■ FALSE can be specified with FALSE, 0, OFF, or NO. When a switch is not specified, it takes the default value (usually, FALSE) specified in the switch description section of a command. For example, open aac0 is the same as open /readonly=FALSE aac0. integer An integer is a positive or negative number that has a value between -263 and (263 - 1). Although the valid range is usually much smaller, all integers have 64 bits of precision and do not contain decimal points. You can specify an integer as a mathematical equation that uses an asterisk (*) to multiply, a plus sign (+) to add, a minus sign (-) to subtract, a slash (/) to divide, and parentheses [( )] to specify order of operations. If you do not use parentheses, all operations are completed left to right. No spaces are allowed in the expression. Numbers in an equation that: ■ Begin and end with no suffix are decimal ■ Begin with 0x or end with h are hexadecimal ■ End with o indicate octal ■ End with z indicate binary You can attach special multipliers to the end of any number to allow for easy translation to reasonable disk sizes. Table 3-1 lists the letters and their multiplicative values: 3-5