Fabric OS Documentation Updates Supporting Fabric OS v7.0.x

Table Of Contents
20 Fabric OS Documentation Updates
53-1002165-10
configure
5
configure
The configure command was accidentally omitted from the “Modified Commands” section in the
Preface. The command was modified to add the Enforced FLOGI/FDISC login parameter.
The description of the Insistent Domain ID Mode attribute has been modified to include this statement:
You must disable the switch before configuring this parameter.
Insistent Domain ID Mode
When this mode is set, the switch attempts to acquire from the fabric the domain
number programmed in its "Switch Fabric Settings." If the operation fails, the
switch will segment from the fabric. You must disable the switch before configuring
this parameter.
The description for the Enable 256 Area limit parameter option 1 incorrectly stated that mode 1 was
incompatible with domain index zoning. The sentence has been removed. The description of Enable 256
Area limit option 1 now reads:
1 The unique area assignments begin at zero regardless of where the port is
physically located. This allows FICON users to make use of high port count port
blades with port indexes greater than 256.
configureChassis
Add the following note to the configureChassis command: All configuration changes made by this
command are non-disruptive. It is not necessary to disable the switch.
On page 151, and in the associated manual page, replace the description of the system.i2cTurboCnfg
parameter with the following text:
system.i2cTurboCnfg value
Configures the i2c driver that manages processing of the i2c interrupts. The
I2CTurbo mode is enabled (Setting 1) by default on all 16G platforms running
Fabric OS v7.0 firmware. The mode is disabled by default for any switches
capable of running v6.4x and v6.3x firmware. An upgrade preserves the
pre-upgrade configuration. The value shown in square brackets is the current
value. The following values are supported:
0 Disables the I2C Turbo mode. When the I2C Turbo mode is disabled, every byte
received by an i2c interrupt is scheduled for processing by the given task or
process. This permits other high priority processes to complete, thereby allowing
for possible delay in the receipt of the I2C response message.
1 Enables the I2C turbo mode for SFPs. This is the default setting. When the I2C
Turbo mode is enabled, every I2C byte received from an SFP is processed by the
interrupt handler itself, thus preventing any higher priority processes from
preempting this processing.
2 For internal use only.
cryptoCfg
On page 159, modify the description of the cryptocfg - -reg -KAClogin parameter as shown and add the
example in the example section: