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Full Discussion: HP-UX server cloning
Operating Systems HP-UX HP-UX server cloning Post 302597127 by vbe on Thursday 9th of February 2012 09:10:51 AM
Old 02-09-2012
Are your disks identical?
If strictly identical, there is an option you should try: vgreduce or split the mirror to have only one disk in vg00 then do a dd...
It should boot...
dont forget to turn off the VG_AUTO_ACTIVATE for vg01... for you will need to import the correct definition of the VG (dont know how you will do that though for SAN is not the same...)
My 2 cents:
I would go and boot the system, that will complain (duplicate address) so try to boot single user modify all that is need, ( /etc/lvmtab, fstab etc...) give a new IP and get your network team to create a VLAN so you can use it even if you are the only node in that sublan...
Once OK, activate you mirroring...
Now add vg01 (pvcreate etc...) and create all lvm as on the original.
Either copy or restore (if you backup utility will do such tasks...).
All this should be done at init level2 to be safe with no fancy unwanted overhead.

this sort of manipulation were my daily routine one time, but long, long ago...
An L3000 had at configuration/order time an option at order: you could choose a tape drive OR a DVD internal... If you wanted both you had to choose which device was external.. I had both and believe the internal tape was the best choice...

P.S.
I did also use the mirror, but had some much issues I gave up... the best of all is by far the Ignite tape, since you can start almost a fresh "install" and configure the new box immediately by giving his new name , IP etc...
Ever considered Ignite via LAN?
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Data::Clone(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  Data::Clone(3pm)

NAME
Data::Clone - Polymorphic data cloning VERSION
This document describes Data::Clone version 0.003. SYNOPSIS
# as a function use Data::Clone; my $data = YAML::Load("foo.yml"); # complex data structure my $cloned = clone($data); # makes Foo clonable package Foo; use Data::Clone; # ... # Foo is clonable my $o = Foo->new(); my $c = clone($o); # $o is deeply copied # used for custom clone methods package Bar; use Data::Clone qw(data_clone); sub clone { my($proto) = @_; my $object = data_clone($proto); $object->do_something(); return $object; } # ... # Bar is also clonable $o = Bar->new(); $c = clone($o); # Bar::clone() is called DESCRIPTION
"Data::Clone" does data cloning, i.e. copies things recursively. This is smart so that it works with not only non-blessed references, but also with blessed references (i.e. objects). When "clone()" finds an object, it calls a "clone" method of the object if the object has a "clone", otherwise it makes a surface copy of the object. That is, this module does polymorphic data cloning. Although there are several modules on CPAN which can clone data, this module has a different cloning policy from almost all of them. See "Cloning policy" and "Comparison to other cloning modules" for details. Cloning policy A cloning policy is a rule that how a cloning routine copies data. Here is the cloning policy of "Data::Clone". Non-reference values Non-reference values are copied normally, which will drop their magics. Scalar references Scalar references including references to other types of references are not copied deeply. They are copied on surface because it is typically used to refer to something unique, namely global variables or magical variables. Array references Array references are copied deeply. The cloning policy is applied to each value recursively. Hash references Hash references are copied deeply. The cloning policy is applied to each value recursively. Glob, IO and Code references These references are not copied deeply. They are copied on surface. Blessed references (objects) Blessed references are not copied deeply by default, because objects might have external resources which "Data::Clone" could not deal with. They will be copied deeply only if "Data::Clone" knows they are clonable, i.e. they have a "clone" method. If you want to make an object clonable, you can use the "clone()" function as a method: package Your::Class; use Data::Clone; # ... my $your_class = Your::Class->new(); my $c = clone($your_object); # $your_object->clone() will be called Or you can import "data_clone()" function to define your custom clone method: package Your::Class; use Data::Clone qw(data_clone); sub clone { my($proto) = @_; my $object = data_clone($proto); # anything what you want return $object; } Of course, you can use "Clone::clone()", "Storable::dclone()", and/or anything you want as an implementation of "clone" methods. Comparison to other cloning modules There are modules which does data cloning. "Storable" is a standard module which can clone data with "dclone()". It has a different cloning policy from "Data::Clone". By default it tries to make a deep copy of all the data including blessed references, but you can change its behaviour with specific hook methods. "Clone" is a well-known cloning module, but it does not polymorphic cloning. This makes a deep copy of data regardless of its types. Moreover, there is no way to change its behaviour, so this is useful only for data which link to no external resources. "Data::Clone" makes a deep copy of data only if it knows that the data are clonable. You can change its behaviour simply by defining "clone" methods. It also exceeds "Storable" and "Clone" in performance. INTERFACE
Exported functions clone(Scalar) Returns a copy of Scalar. Exportable functions data_clone(Salar) Returns a copy of Scalar. The same as "clone()". Provided for custom clone methods. is_cloning() Returns true inside the "clone()" function, false otherwise. DEPENDENCIES
Perl 5.8.1 or later, and a C compiler. BUGS
No bugs have been reported. Please report any bugs or feature requests to the author. SEE ALSO
Storable Clone AUTHOR
Goro Fuji (gfx) <gfuji(at)cpan.org> LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2010, Goro Fuji (gfx). All rights reserved. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.14.2 2011-01-15 Data::Clone(3pm)
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