I'm no guru, but I thing you can get the info you need from the VIC
(V3.5) or the vCenter (v4) by:

Selecting the ESX host in the left pane,

Selecting the "Configuration" tab in the right,

Selecting "Storage Adapters"

Highlight the Storage Adapter providing the storage 

Looking at the "path" or "canonical path" info for a volume.  If it's
iSCSI, then the iSCSI name is also provided.

 

That's the only way I know, but I'm sure there's a way to find it with
the CLI as well.

 

________________________________

From: Jeff Bunting [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2010 8:44 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: ESX LUN ids

 

Any of you ESX gurus know of a command (or maybe a log to look at) that
will show what the LUN ids are on an ESX host?  I've been googling
about, but haven't found anything yet.  We've been migrating a cluster
to a new SAN and one of the hosts is having a problem with some of the
new LUNs because the disk signatures are different.  Someone else
configured the LUNs on the SAN; I'm trying to determine if the problem
is there or on the host.

Thanks,
Jeff

 

 

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