Unless you are installing the Storage Agent, why do you care? If you've installed the Storage Agent you can run the TSMDLST.EXE utility to get the MTx.x.x.x -> WWPN mapping. You can then do a 'lscfg -vl rmtx' on AIX to get the WWPN to match them up. If you've installed the TSM Device Driver, you can start the TSM Console and click down to the TSM Driver and Device Information. That gives you the same output, but in a nice GUI form.
Bill Boyer "Life is not about how fast you run, or how high you climb but how well you bounce." - ?? -----Original Message----- From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Ian Hobbs Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2004 3:25 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: How to see TSM device driver mapping with TSM server I've seen that Windows presents the devices as follows mt{target}.0.0.{bus} So mt4.0.0.6 would be scsi target 4 on bus 6. We found for tape on FC with QLogic cards, life was ALOT easier when we used persistant bindings. All drives would be the same on all machines. Using the QLogic SANBLADE software, allowed us to see both the target and the WWPN of the drive. Once the target is known, the WWPN can be figured out, then mapped to the AIX device names. On Sun, 10 Oct 2004 16:10:05 +0530, Raju Gv wrote: >Hi > > We are currently we are using Aix 4.3.3 with TSM 5.1.1.8 server, We >want to configure TSM 5.2 client on Windows 2000 server. > How to see the windows NT device mapping with TSM server ( element >mapping) > > eg TSM /dev/rmt0 to NT mt4.0.0.6 > >Regards >Sujesh > Ian Hobbs [EMAIL PROTECTED] ======================================================= "Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level then beat you with experience." -Dilbert
