(n.) (logical unit number) See major/minor device numbers.
(Logical Unit Number) A SCSI identifier within a target assigned to each FC accessible disk so that the host can address and access the data on those devices.
Logical Unit Number or Logical Unit; a subdivision of a SCSI target. For SCSI-3, each SCSI target supports up to sixteen LUNs (LUN-0 to LUN-16). Using LUNs, the FC host can address multiple peripheral devices that may share a common controller.
INTE FORTRAN logical unit number.
logical unit number. The SCSI identifier of a logical unit within a target. Targets can present different LUNs to different initiator ports for the same logical unit.
Logical Unit Number. The value used to identify a logical unit of a SCSI device. In the SCSI-2 specification, there may be up to 8 logical units for each SCSI device address. These logical units are numbered from 0-7.
Logical unit number. A LUN is a logical representation of physical storage. You determine whether a LUN is a disk drive, a number of disk drives, or a partition on a disk drive, depending on the RAID configuration.
logical unit number. An encoded three-bit number for the logical unit.
Logical Unit Number. A number assigned to a logical device (such as a tray in a CD changer) that is part of a physical SCSI device, which is assigned a SCSI ID.
An encoded 3-bit identifier used on an SCSI bus to distinguish among up to eight devices (logical units) with the same SCSI ID. An LUN is an indivisible unit presented by a storage device to its host. LUNs are assigned to each disk drive in an array so the host can address and access the data on those devices.
Logical Unit Number, allows multiple devices to share one SCSI ID
ogical nit umber: A subunit of a SCSI ID. A SCSI ID can have up to 8 LUNs.
Logical Unit Number. A unique identifier used on a SCSI bus to distinguish between devices that share the same bus.
A LUN (logical unit number) is a logical representation of physical storage. Users can determine whether a LUN is a disk drive, a number of disk drives, or a partition on a disk drive, depending on RAID configuration.
Logical Unit Number. A three-bit identifier for a Logical Unit. The maximum number of LUNs per SCSI target is 8, numbered LUN0 through LUN7.
A term used in the context of devices connected to a SCSI controller. Each device on a SCSI controller has a SCSI ID, but each SCSI ID may have several...
logical unit number; an addressing scheme used to define SCSI devices on a single SCSI bus.
A number used in a small Computer Systems Interface (SCSI) bus to identify a peripheral device (such as an attached storage system). See SCSI.
Logical Unit Number _ A 3-bit identifier used on a bus to distinguish between up to eight devices (logical units) with the same ID.
logical unit number. An identifier used on a SCSI bus to distinguish among devices (logical units) with the same SCSI ID.
Logical Unit Number. This is a number given to a device attached to a SCSI unit and not directly attached to the SCSI bus.
(Logical Unit Numbers) A logical disk device composed of one or more physical disk mechanisms, typically configured into a RAID level.
Logical Unit Number - as defined in SAM-2: the path to a LU, or the 64-bit address of the LU.
One or more disk modules (each having a head assembly and spindle) bound into a group - usually a RAID group. The operating system sees the LUN, which includes one or more disk modules, as one contiguous span of disk space.
logical unit number. A logical unit number (LUN) is a unique identifier used on a SCSI bus that enables it to differentiate between up to eight separate devices (each of which is a logical unit). Each LUN is a unique number that identifies a specific logical unit, which may be a hard disk, tape drive, or other device which understands the SCSI protocol.
A logical unit is a conceptual division (a subunit) of a storage disk or a set of disks. Logical units can directly correspond to a volume drive (for example, C: can be a logical unit). Each logical unit has an address, known as the logical unit number (LUN), which allows it to be uniquely identified.