Hi

> But "mpt-status -p" only says on which SCSI id the Adapter is.
> So you must use "mtp-status -i $ID". Please make "$ID" configureable in
> /etc/default/mpt-status (with default to ID 0 of course)
I only have access to a box where ID 0 is sufficient, but I always get the 
output below, maybe you can provide me your outputs? I understand it the way 
that mpt-status probes the IDs and finds the right one and then gives you 
the "OPTIMAL" or bad output which is needed by the init script.

Cheers
Steffen


[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo mpt-status -i 0
ioc0 vol_id 0 type IM, 2 phy, 136 GB, state OPTIMAL, flags ENABLED
ioc0 phy 0 scsi_id 0 SEAGATE  ST3146807LC      0007, 136 GB, state ONLINE, 
flags NONE
ioc0 phy 1 scsi_id 1 SEAGATE  ST3146807LC      0007, 136 GB, state ONLINE, 
flags NONE
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo mpt-status
ioc0 vol_id 0 type IM, 2 phy, 136 GB, state OPTIMAL, flags ENABLED
ioc0 phy 0 scsi_id 0 SEAGATE  ST3146807LC      0007, 136 GB, state ONLINE, 
flags NONE
ioc0 phy 1 scsi_id 1 SEAGATE  ST3146807LC      0007, 136 GB, state ONLINE, 
flags NONE
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo mpt-status -p
ioc0 vol_id 0 type IM, 2 phy, 136 GB, state OPTIMAL, flags ENABLED
ioc0 phy 0 scsi_id 0 SEAGATE  ST3146807LC      0007, 136 GB, state ONLINE, 
flags NONE
ioc0 phy 1 scsi_id 1 SEAGATE  ST3146807LC      0007, 136 GB, state ONLINE, 
flags NONE

Attachment: pgpnb9ccpRBC8.pgp
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to