Finding the physical channel associated with a CHPID
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Use the mapping of physical channel IDs (PCHID) to CHPIDs to find the hardware from the CHPID number or the CHPID numbers from the PCHID.
About this task

Knowing the PCHID number can be useful in the following situations:
- When Linux™ indicates that a CHPID is in an error state, you can use the PCHID number to identify the associated hardware.
- When a hardware interface requires service action, the PCHID mapping can be used to determine which CHPIDs and I/O devices will be affected.
Procedure
To find the physical channel ID corresponding to a CHPID,
either:
Example
# lschp CHPID Vary Cfg. Type Cmg Shared PCHID ============================================ 0.30 1 1 1b 2 1 0390 0.31 1 1 1b 2 1 0392 0.32 1 1 1b 2 1 0510 0.33 1 1 1b 2 1 0512 0.34 1 0 1b - - 0580 0.fc 1 1 24 3 1 (0702) 0.fd 1 1 24 3 1 (0703) 0.fe 1 1 24 3 1 (0704)This example shows that CHPID 30 is associated with PCHID 0390, while CHPID fe is associated with internal channel ID 0704.
Alternatively, check
the channel ID sysfs files, for example for CHPID 30:
# cat /sys/devices/css0/chp0.30/chid 0390 # cat /sys/devices/css0/chp0.30/chid_external 1