A few days ago, I had to remove some disks from a linux virtual database server. When I received the sizes and SCSI ID from device names, I compared them and found that they did not match. The server had 4 paravirtual controllers and many disks. So to be sure about what I had to remove I had to see how to map a SCSI device with the virtual disk configured in the virtual machine. This can be accomplished by comparing the SCSI ID listed in the Linux Guest operating system and the virtual machine configuration.
From the the guest os side run
[root@linuxdbsrv ~]# lsscsi -w
[0:0:0:0] disk 0x6000c2945521671d0c476cdbecfd76a3 /dev/sda
[0:0:1:0] disk 0x6000c295c91dfd6f02cfe3605badf928 /dev/sdb
[0:0:2:0] disk 0x6000c29002870543f54f495d7ae05477 /dev/sdc
[0:0:3:0] disk 0x6000c29b33acea6a7429359befa28782 /dev/sdd
[0:0:4:0] disk 0x6000c294ac8f64855d703991b8314833 /dev/sde
[0:0:5:0] disk 0x6000c297c2613875bc61c908e9166017 /dev/sdf
[0:0:6:0] disk 0x6000c294200d2f4c7c081c2873d2111b /dev/sdg
[0:0:8:0] disk 0x6000c298eea0dc918a36b8f0465a5d30 /dev/sdh
[0:0:9:0] disk 0x6000c292d70c33a62b1a3ebc94aedc74 /dev/sdi
[1:0:2:0] disk 0x6000c298639718de1196e12086828c05 /dev/sdl
[1:0:3:0] disk 0x6000c291b629e817469aeaa3963dee10 /dev/sdm
[1:0:4:0] disk 0x6000c29918f96c6d98fe773533bb3bc0 /dev/sdn
[1:0:5:0] disk 0x6000c290b051f741501ec4c1f596a41c /dev/sdo
[1:0:6:0] disk 0x6000c29b63027d2f33730a4de80bd6af /dev/sdp
[1:0:8:0] disk 0x6000c29e401ce8d48ed13db70457ac35 /dev/sdq
[1:0:9:0] disk 0x6000c29a2c37977c710e0faa1702e690 /dev/sdr
[1:0:10:0] disk 0x6000c29b251db3780226813fa010071a /dev/sds
[1:0:13:0] disk 0x6000c29bf9bdbb740cd23c5f8557a2a3 /dev/sdv
[1:0:14:0] disk 0x6000c294841557a36af83b6235da0ad5 /dev/sdw
[2:0:0:0] disk 0x6000c2947e954bf3c0b53f8196c4c1a8 /dev/sdx
[2:0:1:0] disk 0x6000c294f5f81232dced2500353c39e8 /dev/sdy
[2:0:2:0] disk 0x6000c29adfa81cdda82bcdccda0e7b7f /dev/sdz
[2:0:10:0] disk 0x6000c2940b6e96f65acfa97d48992cf1 /dev/sdag
[2:0:11:0] disk 0x6000c29433619f3195ded54ccfea9e54 /dev/sdah
[2:0:12:0] disk 0x6000c29d53073ceb21b754d1bcd05f10 /dev/sdai
[2:0:13:0] disk 0x6000c2968b0449f5254a3e6864f5a873 /dev/sdaj
[2:0:14:0] disk 0x6000c29eb466fa018b710a53f35bbb1c /dev/sdak
[2:0:15:0] disk 0x6000c29abdd276550ab43c1fd125b086 /dev/sdal
[3:0:0:0] disk 0x6000c29e8605f713580c4af5524b30e0 /dev/sdam
[3:0:1:0] disk 0x6000c2930529942096c5b33a8d87d12a /dev/sdan
[3:0:2:0] disk 0x6000c29fce26a8044fe3b5c09bc41ee8 /dev/sdao
[3:0:3:0] disk 0x6000c29d99f62da321ca4b50be19d1b2 /dev/sdap
[3:0:4:0] disk 0x6000c29f4eac6b7aa542d68c2a309679 /dev/sdaq
[3:0:5:0] disk 0x6000c29c32b361d715cffef30955f565 /dev/sdar
[3:0:6:0] disk 0x6000c290e400eaa7d24a74bbf694a857 /dev/sdas
[3:0:8:0] disk 0x6000c29ab928c2c98a0cfbea1ecceb57 /dev/sdat
Using PowerCli obtain information about disks from the vm.
PS C:\> Connect-vIServer vcenterserver