ServerNet Cluster 6780 Operations Guide (G06.28+, H06.05+)
SCF Commands for SNETMON and the ServerNet 
Cluster Subsystem
ServerNet Cluster 6780 Operations Guide—525606-003
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STATUS SUBNET, DETAIL Command Example
If Path State Problems Are Indicated
If the output of the STATUS SUBNET, DETAIL command indicates path-state 
problems, see Methods for Repairing ServerNet Connectivity Problems on page 3-18.
You can also use the OSM Service Connection to investigate path-related problems. If 
an alarm appears on a component of the path, perform any associated repair actions. 
For details, see Using OSM Alarms on page 3-11. 
If these actions do not solve the path problem, contact your service provider.
About IPC Paths and Connections
All processors in a ServerNet cluster are connected over a pair of physical ServerNet X 
and Y fabrics. The fabric at a processor is said to be up if the processor can 
communicate over that fabric. Otherwise it is considered down. 
A path is a unidirectional ServerNet communication conduit between a pair of 
processors over one ServerNet fabric. A path is defined as a source processor, a 
fabric, and a destination processor, in that order. Each processor in the ServerNet 
cluster has a pair of paths, X and Y, to every other processor in the cluster. The other 
processor could be in the same system or in another system. The definition of a path 
includes a sense of direction. Between two processors A and B, there are four paths: 
•
Path X from A to B (maintained by processor A)
•
Path Y from A to B (maintained by processor A) 
•
Path X from B to A (maintained by processor B)
•
Path Y from B to A (maintained by processor B)
A message system connection between two processors is a logical bidirectional 
ServerNet communication conduit that contains these four paths. The message system 
connection between processors A and B can be up only if there is direct ServerNet 
connectivity between the processors in both directions. That is, at least one of the 
paths from A to B must be up, and at least one of the paths from B to A must be up. 
Paths between processors exist in various states for a number of reasons. For 
example, processor A might have put its X path to processor B in a hard down state 
due to a barrier timeout. However, processor B might not have put its X path to 
processor A in a down state because it has not received any errors on it. 
Consequently, the state of a path from A to B is not the same as the state of the path 
from B to A. 
An internal path is a path between a pair of processors within the same system. An 
external path is a path between a local and a remote processor. 










