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Date:      Wed, 17 Nov 1999 06:58:14 -0800
From:      Graeme Tait <graeme@echidna.com>
To:        Marc Wandschneider <MarcW@lanfear.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org, cc@echidna.com
Subject:   Re: How to discover SCSI ID's in a running system
Message-ID:  <3832C286.17A2@echidna.com>
References:  <13D5F9EDFD72D211BC3100105A1C2233054A07@akira.lanfear.com>

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As I said in my original post, the original boot information has long 
since been displaced from the logs by other messages (in particular, a 
flood of messages that resulted from a filesystem getting full).


Marc Wandschneider wrote:
> 
>         cat /var/log/messages
> 
>         You'll see the full boot sequence, which includes information on
> what the SCSI IDs for the devices on your system are.
> 
>         marc.
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Graeme Tait [mailto:graeme@echidna.com]
> > Sent: Wed, November 17, 1999 6:42 AM
> > To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> > Cc: cc@echidna.com
> > Subject: How to discover SCSI ID's in a running system
> >
> >
> > How can I determine the SCSI ID's in use on a SCSI bus in a running
> > server, without rebooting?
> >
> > In my case there are presently several hard drives plus a
> > CD-ROM reader
> > on the bus. I need to configure a second system to duplicate
> > the existing
> > configuration.
> >
> > (Other messages have long since displaced the last boot
> > information from
> > the logs. System is 2.2.7S/CAM, using an ASUS P2B-S motherboard with
> > on-board SCSI.)


-- 
Graeme Tait - Echidna



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