Cisco Systems PA-4C-E 1 manual Using SanDisk Devices, Recovering from Locked Blocks

Page 38

Configuring the HP ESCON PA

In the squeeze command display output, the displayed characters have the following meaning:

The character “e” means the Flash memory special location has been erased, which occurs before a write operation.

The character “b” means that the data that is about to be written to this special location has been temporarily copied.

The character “E” signifies that the sector that was temporarily occupied by the data has been erased.

The character “S” signifies that the data was written to its permanent location in Flash memory.

The character “Z” means this log was erased after the successful squeeze command operation.

The squeeze command automatically tracks which of these functions has been performed so upon sudden power failure, it can safely continue with the process.

Recovering from Locked Blocks

A locked block of Flash memory occurs when power is lost or a Flash memory card is unplugged during a write or erase operation. When a block of Flash memory is locked, it cannot be written to or erased, and the operation will consistently fail at a particular block location. The only way to recover from locked blocks is by reformatting the Flash memory card with the format command.

Caution Formatting a Flash memory card to recover from locked blocks will cause existing data to be lost.

Using SanDisk Devices

PCMCIA Flash memory cards use a slot0/slot1 convention to specify memory locations; slot0 is the default directory for IOS searches. However, SanDisk memory devices use a disk0/disk1 convention. Therefore, when you use a SanDisk device on a Cisco 7200 series router, you need to specify disk0 or disk1 explicitly in IOS search arguments.

For example, to copy a new microcode image to a Sandisk device, use the following command:

copy tftp:source_filename {disk0 disk1}:sandisk_filename

where:

source_filename is the source location of the microcode image file

sandisk_filename is the destination on disk0 or disk1 of the SanDisk memory card The following example shows sample output for the copy tftp:filename command:

 

 

 

Router# copy

tftp:xcpa27-1 disk0:xcpa27-1

 

 

 

2283972 bytes available on device flash, proceed? [confirm]

 

 

 

Address or name of remote host [biff.cisco.com]? [confirm]

 

 

 

Source filename [xcpa27-1]? [confirm]

 

 

 

Destination filename [xcpa27-1]? [confirm]

 

 

 

Accessing file "xcpa27-1" on biff.cisco.com ...

 

 

 

Loading xcpa26-1 from 1.1.1.22 (via FastEthernet0/0):!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_kernel_xcpa (406910 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_seg_802 (245522 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_seg_cmpc (564632 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_seg_csna (96024 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_seg_eca (460704 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_seg_offload (91420 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

Expanding

disk0:xcpa27-1_seg_pca (68840 bytes):!!!!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

PA-4C-E 1-Port High-Performance ESCON Channel Port Adapter Installation and Configuration

 

 

 

 

38

 

 

OL-3743-02

 

 

 

 

 

Image 38
Contents PA-4C-E 1-Port High-Performance Organization Document Revision HistoryObjectives Document Version Date Change SummaryRelated Documentation OL-3743-02 Overview Port Adapter OverviewCisco 7206 with an HP Escon PA in Port Adapter Slot LEDs Escon SpecificationsCharacteristic Escon Specification Sequence Present Loaded Signal Online OffEscon Cable Port Adapter Slot Locations on the Supported PlatformsIdentifying Interface Addresses Port Adapter Slots in the Cisco 7206 RouterPlatform Interface Address Format Numbers Syntax Required Tools and Equipment HP Escon PA Microcode OverviewHardware and Software Requirements Router# show microcodeChecking Hardware and Software Compatibility Cisco IOS Release Image NamesSafety Guidelines Safety WarningsAviso Instruções Importantes DE Segurança Warnung Wichtige SicherheitshinweiseAvvertenza Importanti Istruzioni Sulla Sicurezza Spara Dessa Anvisningar Preventing Electrostatic Discharge Damage Laser LED Safety InformationElectrical Equipment Guidelines Laser Radiation Staring into Laser Beam Removing and Installing Port Adapters Handling Port AdaptersOnline Insertion and Removal Port Adapter Removal and Installation Step Attaching the HP Escon PA to the Channel Configuring the HP Escon PA Using the Exec Command InterpreterRouter# configure terminal Configuring the HP Escon PA InterfacePerforming a Basic Interface Configuration Routerconfig# interface channel 2/0 Checking the ConfigurationUsing show Commands to Verify the New Interface Status Routerconfig-if#ip address 1.1.1.10Using the show version or show hardware Commands Router# show versionUsing the show controllers Commands Router# show controllers channel 2/0Using the show diag Command Router# show interface channel 4/0Using the Ping Command to Verify Network Connectivity Router# pingUpgrading the HP Escon PA Microcode from Cisco.com Upgrading Your HP Escon PA MicrocodeHow Does HP Escon PA Microcode Ship? Configuring the HP Escon PA Microcode Router show flashRouterconfig# microcode ecpa slot0xcpa28-1 Routerconfig# no microcode ecpa slot0xcpa28-1Using Flash Memory Router# copy tftpxcpa28-6 slot0xcpa28-6Router# squeeze slot0 Using Additional Flash Memory CommandsRouter# cd slot0 Tftpxcpa27-1 disk0xcpa27-1 Using SanDisk DevicesRecovering from Locked Blocks Running HP Escon PA Diagnostic Tests Router# configuration termConfiguring the HP Escon PA