Hi All :)
I am currently involved in a project in which there is a SAN array (Sun Storagetek 2540) which exports LUNs for some servers with Centos 5.2 x86. I will be performing a migration to Centos 5.9 x86_64 in some time and am gathering needed info now :)
I am trying to find the place in the OS where there is the information about LUN mappings to /dev/ devices.
For example on array level I have an exported LUN with number 8. I see it on one of the servers with lsscsi as:
# lsscsi | grep '7:0:0:8' [7:0:0:8] disk SUN LCSM100_F 0735 /dev/sdj
As I said I need to perform migration of the OS to Centos 5.9 x86_64 and am curious where from does the mapping
scsi device 7:0:0:8 <-> /dev/sdj
come?
I have some complex logical volume (Veritas Volume Manager) setup based on /dev/ disks (which are derived from LUNs imported from the array) and will need to recreate it on destination servers. My coworker said that udev may be assigning the /dev/sdj (and other) identifier so I checked this. In /etc/udev/rules.d/* I see rules for scsi subsystem (sysfs type 0 is "disk"):
ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="scsi", WAIT_FOR_SYSFS="ioerr_cnt" ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="scsi_device", SYSFS{type}=="0", RUN+="socket:/org/kernel/diskres/uevents" ACTION=="remove", SUBSYSTEM=="scsi_device", RUN+="socket:/org/kernel/diskres/uevents"
So I do not see anything which could answer my question. There have been other rules for different sysfs types but I think they are not relevant in my case.
In sysfs in /sys/bus/scsi/devices/7:0:0:8 I found:
# ll block:sdj lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Oct 4 17:57 block:sdj -> ../../../../../../../../../../block/sdj
Where else can I look for the LUN<->/dev/ device mapping rules? How are the LUNs mapped to operating system devices? Is there a way to add a static mapping so that also on a new server after attaching SAN array LUN number 8 will be visible as /dev/sdj? I think that there is a possibility that on a new server mentioned LUN will be visible as a different /dev/sd? :( That could potentially break my logical volume setup on the destination server.
Any info will be greatly appreciated :)
BR, Rafal.