Prior to configuring a tape device on Fibre Channel ports, the
worldwide identifier (WWID) of the device must be detected
and stored, along with a device name, in the text file
SYS$SYSTEM:SYS$DEVICES.DAT. You use the SYSMAN command IO FIND_
WWID to accomplish this.
The SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID command probes all Fibre Channel ports
and locates all tape and medium changer devices. For tapes and
medium changers that have not been detected by any previous
SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID command, IO FIND_WWID assigns a device name,
retrieves the WWID of the device, stores the device name and WWID
data in the SYS$SYSTEM:SYS$DEVICES.DAT file, and updates memory
structures.
Because the main goal of SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID is to populate the
SYS$DEVICES.DAT file, you need to invoke the SYSMAN IO FIND_
WWID command only one time for each new device. Note that using
the SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID command for the first time detects all
existing tape and medium changer devices on the system at that
time.
Once the information is stored in the file, subsequent use of
the SYSMAN IO AUTOCONFIGURE command reads the file and configures
the tape and medium changer devices automatically, loading or
connecting the device drivers as needed. The SYS$DEVICES.DAT
file is read during each system reboot, initiating the automatic
configuration of tapes and medium changers on the Fibre Channel.
(SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID does not load or connect the actual device
drivers.)
NOTE
If you add more devices to the system at a later time,
you must powercycle the MDR to update internal mapping
information. You must also run the SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID
command again to append the new device information to the
SYS$DEVICES.DAT file.
Similarly, for the Network Storage Router (NSR), the LUN map
must be updated.
In an OpenVMS cluster environment, you must run the SYSMAN IO
FIND_WWID command on each node in the cluster to update various
data structures in memory. Alternatively, you can run SYSMAN
IO FIND_WWID on one node, and then reboot the other nodes that
share that same system disk, because the SYS$DEVICES.DAT file is
read at boot time and causes memory structures to be correctly
initialized.
In the case of multiple system disks in the cluster, ensure that
all copies of the SYS$DEVICES.DAT file are kept consistent,
preferably by running the SYSMAN IO FIND_WWID command on all
nodes. Alternatively, you can run IO FIND_WWID to update just
one SYS$DEVICES.DAT file, and then manually edit the remaining
SYS$DEVICES.DAT files by cutting and pasting the appropriate
devnam/WWID records from the original file to the target files.
HP recommends that you refrain from copying the entire original
file to another system disk, because the SYS$DEVICES.DAT file
is also used to define Port Allocation Classes, and PAC entries
could be inadvertently transferred to the target system.