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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Production Directory Structures Post 302079553 by System Shock on Tuesday 11th of July 2006 10:18:07 AM
Old 07-11-2006
You are going to get a lot of different opinions as to what's "best".
My suggestion to you would be to determine what your needs are within your environment (as in what's in your new box, how extensive/mission critical your in-house apps are) before making a decision.
How extensive are these in-house applications? Something small that requires little hard drive space, it's easy to re-install, and has no data that needs to be backed up can go in /usr/local/bin. If you are talking about something like Oracle, or Netcool, or Suitespot, i.e., applications that require lots of hard drive space, need to be backed up, etc, you'd want to put those in their own slice (or disk, depending on what you have). Whether is off / or /usr/ or whenever, it doesn't matter as long as they are in their own slice/disk; technically, they wouldn't be off any of those directories. Ex: /opt can sit in /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s6, and have /opt/netcool sit on /dev/dsk/c2t3d1s4. If you issue an ls command, it'd seem that netcool is off /opt, but if you issue a df command, you'll find out it isn't.
 

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lufslist(1M)															      lufslist(1M)

NAME
lufslist - list configuration of a boot environment SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/lufslist [-l error_log] [-o outfile] BE_name [-X] DESCRIPTION
The lufslist command is part of a suite of commands that make up the Live Upgrade feature of the Solaris operating environment. See live_upgrade(5) for a description of the Live Upgrade feature. The lufslist command lists the configuration of a boot environment (BE). The output contains the disk slice (file system), file system type, and file system size for each BE mount point. The following is an example of lufslist output. # lufslist BE_name Filesystem fstype size(Mb) Mounted on ------------------------------------------------------------------ /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s1 swap 512.11 - /dev/dsk/c0t4d0s3 ufs 3738.29 / /dev/dsk/c0t4d0s4 ufs 510.24 /opt File system type can be ufs, swap, or vxfs, for a Veritas file system. Under the Filesystem heading can be a disk slice or a logical device, such as a disk metadevice used by volume management software. The lufslist command requires root privileges. OPTIONS
The lufslist command has the following options: -l error_log Error and status messages are sent to error_log, in addition to where they are sent in your current environment. -o outfile All command output is sent to outfile, in addition to where it is sent in your current environment. -X Enable XML output. Characteristics of XML are defined in DTD, in /usr/share/lib/xml/dtd/lu_cli.dtd.<num>, where <num> is the version number of the DTD file. OPERANDS
BE_name Name of the BE for which file systems are to be reported. You cannot specify a BE that is involved in another Live Upgrade operation. EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred. FILES
/etc/lutab list of BEs on the system /usr/share/lib/xml/dtd/lu_cli.dtd.<num> Live Upgrade DTD (see -X option) ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWluu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
lu(1M), luactivate(1M), lucancel(1M), lucompare(1M), lucreate(1M), lucurr(1M), ludelete(1M), ludesc(1M), lumake(1M), lumount(1M), lure- name(1M), lustatus(1M), luupgrade(1M), lutab(4), attributes(5), live_upgrade(5) SunOS 5.10 24 Jan 2002 lufslist(1M)
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