Sponsored Content
Operating Systems HP-UX HP-UX Filesystem backup/restore? Post 28977 by Perderabo on Thursday 26th of September 2002 09:52:10 PM
Old 09-26-2002
Re: /stand must be hfs

Quote:
Originally posted by yls177
/stand must be "hfs". is there any reason for that?
When a HP 9000 boots, the first thing that happens is firmware called pdc (processor dependent code) starts to run. Pdc can read files from a lif formatted area (the BDRA mentioned above). It will find a program called ISL and load it into core. ISL (independent system loader) is used for HP-UX and other HP os'es. It can load other lif area programs into core and run them. And there is a standalone program called "hpux" which is loaded into core by isl. The hpux loader must locate the kernel and read it into core. This means that the hpux loader must completely understand the filesystem by itself. So far it only understand hfs. My guess is that HP wants vxfs to settle down and become stable before they will add vxfs to the hpux loader. Rewriting the hpux loader to add vxfs is not a trivial task...

See the man pages for pdc(1M), isl(1M), hpux_800(1m).
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Backup / restore

Hi.... everyone could help me to understand how to do a backup of my servers .. operating systems is sun solaris 8 . I have some question about .... 1) Is better backup phisical disk or partition ??? i sow the command is ufsdump 0cfu /expbck/bcksunver/c0t0d0s5 dev/dsk/c0t0d0s5 to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tt155
4 Replies

2. AIX

Backup and restore

I have several H80 machines, all with AIX 4.3.3. On these machines I have mksysb running for rootvg backups and savevg for non-rootvg backups. I'm trying to get a list of files on the tapes, but I can't seem to do it with tar for the mksysb images. I keep getting the directory checksum errors?... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: uXion
3 Replies

3. HP-UX

F-Backup restore

Hello! i have a blank harddrive and a complete tape backup of the workstation. the backup is made with F-Backup. Now my question is: how can i restore my workstation? thanks for every idea! paul tittel hup-si (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: paultittel
3 Replies

4. HP-UX

Backup Tape Restore?

I am trying to do a restore on a backup tape (DDS2) and am having a little trouble. For one, I dont know how the tape was made, whether is was tar, cpio, dump..etc. Anyone know how to restore a tape without knowing the format of the backup? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bake255
5 Replies

5. Solaris

Full backup and Restore

Dear All ; first how are you every body I'm just subscribed in your forum and i hope i found what i searched for along time . I'm not a Solaris specialist but i read more to build a Network Management Station depends on Solaris as OS and it is working good now . my problem is how to perform... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: Basha
16 Replies

6. Solaris

Restore from Flash Archive on local filesystem

I am doing a practice restore using a test UNIX(Solaris) system, and a SCSI Hard Drive whose slice 5 contains the Flash Archive file that I need to restore from. The test system is offline( no network ) and does not have external devices, such as tape drive. My goal is to somehow restore the... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: the.gooch
9 Replies

7. AIX

Backup and restore

Hi experts, i got a question. i have a production server with two Volume Group(VG) which are rootvg and datavg. Both of these VGs are 256 PP SIZE. On Disaster Recovery Server (DR server) contains two empty hardisks for restoring rootvg and datavg from production server. This two hardisks are... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: polar
7 Replies

8. SuSE

SuSE 11.4 Filesystem Backup and Restore

Hi, The dump and restore commands are missing from this server under SuSE 11.4 for unknown reasons. What is the cleanest way to backup and restore filesystems? Clean means to keep all the original hard/soft links and timestamps. Is find/cpio clean enough? $ cd /source $ find . -print | cpio... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
4 Replies

9. Red Hat

Backup / Restore

Hi, I need to back up a RH file system (96G). The files are oracle .dbf format some of which are 5G in size. I know that tar has got a size restriction of 2G so I cannot use this. Can anyone recommend an alternative way of backuping up this FS? I have been looking at dump but this... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Duffs22
6 Replies

10. AIX

Is there any possibilty to restore backup taken with backupby file name to any other filesystem

Hi, I have taken a backup of filesystem " /backup " by using backupby file name command on tape Mount volume 1 on /dev/rmt0. Press Enter to continue. Backing up to /dev/rmt0. Cluster 51200 bytes (100 blocks). Volume 1 on /dev/rmt0 a 0 /backup a 543 /backup/abc_log ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: m_raheelahmed
3 Replies
hpux.efi(1M)															      hpux.efi(1M)

NAME
hpux.efi - HP-UX bootstrap for Itanium-based systems SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
is the HP-UX-specific operating system loader utility for bootstrap. It is a native efi(4) application that can be run on the Itanium- based platform. supports the following options: Display the release and version numbers of the utility. Boot the system in tunable maintenance mode, also known as "failsafe boot" mode. This option will disregard the tunable settings and module settings in the kernel configuration, and boot with known good settings instead. Boot the system in VxVM maintenance mode, configure only the root volume, and then enter single user mode. The following commands can be given interactively from the keyboard or provided in an efi(4) file. Load a kernel object file from an HP-UX file system and transfer control to the loaded image. (Note, the operation is position-dependent). Currently, is limited to disk for booting. file can be the name of a kernel object file or the name of a kernel configuration direc- tory. The following commands can given interactively from the keyboard only after is launched. List the contents of HP-UX directories in detail. List the contents of HP-UX directories. Display the contents of the file. Change the contents of the file to string. boot Operation The operation loads an ELF kernel object file from supported HP-UX file system (HFS, VxFS). It then transfers control to the loaded image. In addition to the kernel object file, also loads persistent system-specific files from the directory and kernel configuration-specific files from the directory during operation. always assumes (the boot directory) as the current directory. For example, would actually yield: Along with this information, gives the sizes of the and segments before transferring control to it. The operation accepts several options. Note that options be specified positionally as shown in the syntax statement in the Options for the operations are as follows: Set the initial run-level for when booting the system. This run-level overrides any run-level specified in an entry in See init(1M) and inittab(4). variable=value Set the specified variable to the specified value. (No whitespace is allowed.) If variable is a kernel tunable parameter, this sets the value of that tunable, overriding the value in the kernel con- figuration being booted. value must be a decimal integer or a hexadecimal integer (with a prefix). can load only ELF object files. ll and ls Operations The and operations list the contents of the HP-UX directory. In addition to filenames, displays size and date information when used on supported HP-UX filesystems. For VxVM disks, only boot volume information can be displayed. To display boot volume information, either a relative path to or an abso- lute path can be used. setauto Operation The operation overwrites the contents of the file, with the string specified. showauto Operation The operation displays the contents of the file, See in the section. EXAMPLES
Automatic Boot This is an overview of HP-UX automatic boot processes on Itanium-based systems. When power is applied to the HP-UX system processor, or the system button is pressed, Itanium-based system firmware code is executed to verify hardware and general system integrity (see boot(1M)). After initializing the hardware, the EFI is launched. The EFI gives the user the option to automatically start any EFI appli- cation. After is launched by the EFI it looks for an file and uses its content for the boot string. Then it gives the user the option to override the sequence by pressing any key: If does not detect a key press, it initiates the sequence using the string. displays messages similar to the following on the console: If successfully locates the kernel object file, it displays the progress of loading each sections and the symbol table of the object file. Then it displays the progress of loading system- and kernel configuration-specific directories. Finally, displays the complete path to the kernel object file loaded and the size, size, and size of the load image before control is passed to the image. The loaded image then displays numerous configuration and status messages. Interactive Boot To use interactively, the user must interrupt the autoboot sequence by pressing a key or removing the file. Then interactively prompts for commands. SEE ALSO
boot(1M), hpux(1M), init(1M), efi(4), inittab(4). Itanium(R)-based Systems Only hpux.efi(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:28 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy