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Fesa (fast ethernet servernet adapter), Attributes, Fesa – HP NonStop G-Series User Manual

Page 132: Physical, Logical, Actions, Abort, Start, Stop, Fesa physical logical

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FESA (Fast Ethernet ServerNet Adapter)

An adapter that connects the ServerNet connections inside a server to a 10/100Base-TX local area network (LAN).

The Fast Ethernet ServerNet adapter (FESA) CRU contains one Fast Ethernet ServerNet addressable controller
(

SAC

), which contains one Ethernet physical interface, that corresponds to the one Ethernet port on each FESA CRU.

Location in OSM Tree: System > Group > Module > FESA

Slot Location: FESA CRUs can be located in slots 53 and 54 in processor enclosures (service side) or in slots 51, 52,
53, and 54 in IOMF or IOMF2 enclosures (service side).

Example: FESA $ZZLAN.FESA1 (1.1.53)

Attributes

FESA

Displayed in the Attributes tab and Attributes dialog box only if the value is something
other than OK.

Values

Service State

Physical

A code that identifies the generation of the component. Hardware revision codes are
used for tracking components.

Hardware Revision

Identifies the manufacturer of the component.

Manufacturer

The part number of the component that was assigned in manufacturing. Use part
numbers for identifying and ordering parts.

Part Number

Whether the component is powered on.

Values

Power State

A unique serial number that identifies the component. Track IDs are used for tracking
components.

Track ID

Logical

The configuration type of this resource.
Values: CCSA, E4SA, FESA, G4SA, GESA, TRSA, Unknown

Configured Type

The state of the component as known to the operating system on the server.

Values

Device State

Actions

Abort

Terminates operation of the Fast Ethernet ServerNet adapter (FESA) and the associated Ethernet ServerNet addressable
controller (SAC). When the Abort action finishes, the FESA and the SAC are in the Stopped state.

Start

Starts the Fast Ethernet ServerNet adapter (FESA) and the associated Ethernet ServerNet addressable controller
(SAC). The FESA and the SAC must be in the Stopped state before you perform this action.

During startup, the controller operational code is automatically loaded into the SAC. When the Start action completes,
both the FESA and the SAC are in the Started state.

Stop

Rather than automatically stopping the FESA (as the Abort action does), this action first warns you if the FESA is
currently in use (and stops it only after you confirm).

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System Resources