Displaying fcp initiator mode statistics, Fcp initiator mode statistics, Displaying fabric statistics through hcm – Dell Brocade Adapters User Manual

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Brocade Adapters Troubleshooting Guide

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Statistics

3

Displaying fabric statistics through HCM

Use the Fabric Statistics dialog box to monitor a variety of port data.

1. Launch the HCM.

2. Select the FC port from the device tree window.

3. Click Monitor > Statistics > Fabric Statistics.

Displaying FCP initiator mode statistics

Use the fcpim --stats command to display FCP initiator mode statistics and attributes.

fcpim --stats <port_id> <pcifn> <rpwwn> [-l <lpwwn>

where:

stats

Displays FCP initiator mode statistics.

pcifn

PCI function number associated with the physical port.

-l lpwwn

Logical PWWN. This is an optional argument. If the -l lpwwn argument is not
specified, the base port is used.

-l rpwwn

Remote PWWN.

To clear FCP initiator mode statistics, enter the following command.

fcpim --statsclr <pcifn> <rpwwn [-l <lpwwn>]

FCP initiator mode statistics

Use HCM to display FCP IM module statistics for each initiator target nexus (ITN). Statistics display
such as I/Os waiting for circular queue space, number of I/O context requests, I/O abort requests,
number of task management I/O context requests, I/O completions with OK status, number of
successful firmware I/O underrun operations, number of successful firmware I/O overrun
operations, aborted I/O requests, I/O timeouts, I/O selection timeouts, I/O protocol errors, host I/O
abort requests, PRLI statistics, and remote port statistics.

Use the following steps to display the FCP IM Statistics dialog box.

1. Launch the HCM.

2. Select the base adapter port from the device tree window.

3. Click Monitor > Statistics > FCP IM Module Statistics.

or

Right-click a port from the device tree and select Statistics > FCP IM Module Statistics.

Enabling and disabling profiling for FCP initiator mode statistics through BCU

When profiling is enabled, I/O latency data is distributed based on I/O size (average, minimum, and
maximum). You can use this to study typical application I/O patterns, and this may help in tuning
adapters, fabric, and targets for better performance. You must run the fcpim --stats command to
display this data.

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