hicksd8, strange situation is like this. Server is up and running right now with rootdg of VxVM. rootdg is consist of c1t1d0. So I can assume that c1t1d0s0 (for root), & c1t1d0s5 (for /var) are working fine. But I am not able to see them in format output.
I already did reconfiguration reboot, which didn't helped. Is there anyway if I can boot it without reboot and online ?
Hi Guys!!
Iam new to this thread.
I have a very urgent requirement of finding the local disk space. Iam running a php script on linux machine and need to find the local disk space on the remote machines.
I tried using df -h, which works if I specify the drive name on the remote machine.... (4 Replies)
Hello - I am trying to connect to a remote solaris box from a solaris box i have locally present with me using 'ssh login@IP' ... Its connecting fine but... when I run xclock - it says 'Can't open display'
Whereas, IF I connect to same remote solaris IP from my windows desktop locally via putty... (9 Replies)
We ordered a DVD for solaris 10 upgrade . However I realized that we have cd rom only and DVD is unreadable . Can i use this DVD , to upgrade the release from local disks. If yes , is there any specific procedure. (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to move a local directory from a local disk to a nfs disk that has been shared on another file server. I am using this tar command:
tar cf - . | (cd /export/nfsdisk && tar xpf - )
It copies the data okay but the big problem is that is resets the owner:group to 'nobody'. The... (2 Replies)
I totally new to UNIX and I have a newbie question.
I have 2 servers, AIX and Solaris and I need to be on just one platform.
both serves have 2 physical drives, with the OS on one and data on the other.
can I take the data drive from the AIX server and mount it on the Solaris server?
or would... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I recently added a disk on a solaris 9 and I wanted to make it accessible for another machine, using the same name
here is what i did :
On the machine holding the internal disk
in vfstab i added the line
/dev/dsk/c1t1d0s4 /dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s4 /SHARED2 ufs 2 yes ... (2 Replies)
Hello Team,
Our p740 systems are booting up from SAN. We would like to configure the local disk(which is not part of rootvg) as a primary dump device. I have assigned the same too. But in the errpt throwing the below error. Please help me on this.
... (1 Reply)
Dear all,
I am unable to get the desired result upon executing the below script. the problem is at `perl -le 'print scalar localtime $msecage'` ouput which gives the following result "Thu Jan 1 05:00:00 1970" instead of "Tue Nov 13 10:30:56 2012" but when I run the same command from shell... (2 Replies)
I am in the market looking to purchase a new E950 server and I am trying to decide between using local SSD drives or SSD based SAN. The application that will be running on this server is read-intensive so I am looking for the most optimal configuration to support this application. There are no... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ikx
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
vxinstall
vxinstall(1M)vxinstall(1M)NAME
vxinstall - menu-driven Veritas Volume Manager initial configuration procedure
SYNOPSIS
vxinstall
DESCRIPTION
The vxinstall utility provides a menu driven interface to configure Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM). If you install the Veritas Volume Man-
ager software package using the operating system's package administration commands, you can run vxinstall to configure VxVM for initial use
on your system.
Note: If you use the Veritas software installation scripts, do not run this utility.
OPERATIONS
Licensing
vxinstall first asks if you want to view the Veritas licenses already installed on the system. Answering "yes" is equivalent to exe-
cuting the vxlicrep command (see vxlicrep(1)).
You are then asked if you want to add licenses for other Veritas products. Answering "yes" is equivalent to running the vxlicinst
command (see vxlicinst(1)). and entering a license key.
Enclosure-Based Naming
You can choose whether you want to use disk access names that are based on the device names assigned by the operating system, or that
are based on names that you assign to enclosures.
System-Wide Default Disk Group
You can enter the name for the default disk group (defaultdg). This is an alias for the disk group name that should be assumed if the
-g option is not specified to a command, or if the VXVM_DEFAULTDG environment variable is undefined. By default, defaultdg is set to
nodg (that is, no disk group).
NOTES
From release 4.0 of VxVM, it is no longer necessary to run vxinstall to configure the rootdg disk group. Disks and disk groups may be
added to VxVM by running commands such as vxdiskadm(1M) or by using the graphical user interface without first running vxinstall. The
operation of VxVM does not require any disk groups to have been configured, and a disk group named rootdg does not need to be present on
the system. Any disk group may be configured as the default disk group that is to be used with VxVM commands. Any disk group named rootdg
has no special significance to VxVM. See the vxdg(1M) manual page for further details.
SEE ALSO vxdctl(1M), vxdg(1M), vxdiskadm(1M), vxintro(1M), vxlicinst(1), vxlicrep(1)VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vxinstall(1M)