Here is the break down of the hardware path, Scsi device 10/0/15, Nse scsi – HP B1000 User Manual
Page 211: Scsi id 2, Scsi device 10/0/15/1.5.0, Lvd scsi 10/0/15/1.5.0, Scsi id 5 10/0/15/1.5.0

Appendix B
211
SCSI Connections
Assigning SCSI Device IDs
Assigning Ultra Narrow Single-Ended SCSI Device IDs
You can determine which Ultra Narrow Single-Ended SCSI (NSE SCSI) devices are
currently in use by reviewing the output from the
ioscan
command discussed above and
looking under the “H/W Path” heading. The entry
10/0/15/0
is the built-in Ultra Narrow
Single-Ended SCSI bus. For devices connected to the built-in Ultra Narrow Single-Ended
SCSI bus, such as disks, the number between the two decimals and after the third “/” in
the hardware path specifies the SCSI ID for that device. For example, a hardware path of
10/0/15/0.2.0
specifies a NSE SCSI device at SCSI ID 2.
Here is the break down of the hardware path:
SCSI device 10/0/15/
0.2.0
NSE SCSI
10/0/15/
0
.2.0
SCSI ID 2
10/0/15/0.
2
.0
CAUTION
Do not use SCSI device ID 7 for any device. It is reserved for the built-in SCSI
bus controller.
Assigning Ultra2 Wide Low-Voltage Differential SCSI Device IDs
You can determine which Ultra2 Wide Low-Voltage Differential SCSI (LVD SCSI) devices
are currently in use by reviewing the output from the
ioscan
command discussed above
and looking under the “H/W Path” heading. The entry
10/0/15/1
is the built-in Ultra2
Wide Low-Voltage Differential SCSI bus. For devices connected to the built-in Ultra2 Wide
Low-Voltage Differential SCSI bus, such as disks, the number between the two decimals
and after the third “
/
” in the hardware path specifies the SCSI ID for that device. For
example, a hardware path of
10/0/15/1.5.0
specifies a LVD SCSI device at SCSI ID 5.
Here is the break down of the hardware path:
SCSI device
10/0/15/1.5.0
LVD SCSI
10/0/15/1.5.0
SCSI ID 5
10/0/15/1.5.0
CAUTION
Do not use SCSI device ID 7 for any device. It is reserved for the built-in SCSI
bus controller.