Thanks to everyone for their replies. There were many that suggested that I use format, which would have worked if I was dealing with disks but as I was having trouble with tapes so it didn't do the trick. Many also suggested using prtconf and prtdiag, but these didn't spit out all the info I was looking for. Anil Sreedharan, mentioned that if you have Netbackup installed (I did) then you can use /usr/openv/volmgr/bin/sgscan This worked exactly as I needed but isn't a very generic solution. Many pointed me to a freeware utility called scsiinfo which can be found at http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~jdd/ I didn't try this but it looks like it'll do what I wanted. And the big winner was Doug Floer, who's 9 character email seems to work pretty much on any stock machine: iostat -E Great way to use a tool that was designed for something else. In the end my problem turned out to be a bent pin on one of the SCSI cables :) -Josh -----Original Message----- From: Josh Lukens [mailto:josh.lukens@us.ubizen.com] Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2002 11:10 AM To: Sunmanagers Subject: OS level equivalent command to probe-scsi-all? Hi all, This is probably a stupid question, but I can't figure it out and I think I'm missing something really obvious. I need to find a OS level command (Solaris 7, on sparc) that will give me similar information to what a probe-scsi-all would give me from the ok prompt. Basically what SCSI devices are connected to what, with what IDs, and their vendor description strings. Will summarize, thanks, -Josh [demime 0.99c.1 removed an attachment of type application/x-pkcs7-signature which had a name of smime.p7s] _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Fri Feb 1 09:55:34 2002
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