07-25-2006
Unix Stale Mounts
Is there an easy way to find all stale mounts on a system?
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi, i was trying to mirror root volume group and the command i was using didnt respond for a long time
mirrorvg -m rootvg hdisk1
I was checking rootvg and it gives below. how do i fix stale partitions?? it seems to be on hdisk1
LV NAME TYPE LPs PPs PVs LV STATE ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthikosu
2 Replies
2. Solaris
hi,
i have currently below mounts in solaris box and i want to create new mount points.
please let me know how can i do it?
bash-3.00# df -h
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
/ 1000M 350M 609M 37% /
/dev 1000M 350M ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rags_s11
3 Replies
3. AIX
I have 2 mounts with me. Each 200 Gigs. I have some heavy duty processing, that may require more than 200 Gigs at time. Is there anyway that I can make the two points a clubbed up directory. Or create a symbolic link (bleahhh). Here are factors:
1. two mounts are two different hard drives. (just... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: seemit
0 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I'm new to Linux and to this forum too. Now, I need some info.
I have an application which writes some data onto one mount(logs and others).
Now, I want to have some convention or script where if the mount(where the application is writing data) reaches certain amount of memory or if it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: krisdasword
1 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi,
How can i check if a particular Netapps NAS share being used on some other servers - ie: being accessed, mounted?
example:
somedir - rw, intr servernetapp.net.com:/vol/vol100/somedir is being mounted on some filesystem on other server.
is it possible to check on the NIS? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: greencored
1 Replies
6. HP-UX
HP-UX B.11.23 U ia64
I've got two users that show in "w" with long idle times but if I search for their processes I find nothing (ps -ef | grep username )
I'm not sure why "w" still sees them and if there is anything (short of a reboot) that I can do to clean them out.
Ideas? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: LisaS
8 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello,
Iam trying to clone AS IS two mounts like below
/class_test/sa
/class_dev/fd
from one server onto another.
I want to use tar and gzip to compress. Please let me know the options I have to use.
Also I want to untar it in the destination server, so let me know how to do... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: baanprog
3 Replies
8. HP-UX
Hello,
I have an ancient HP-UX 11.11 system where I have a logical volume marked stale and I can't get it sync'd. I have tried lvsync and lvreduce/lvextend to no avail. It is just one 4Mb PE on the disk that I can't get current.
# lvdisplay -v /dev/vg00/lvol5 | grep stale
LV Status ... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: port43
17 Replies
9. AIX
Hi friends,
the paging lv hd6 is in stale condition
hd6 paging 48 96 2 open/stale N/A
And i'am getting the following alerts in the server 333BD283 0811044814 U S LVDD Bad block detected with no relocation al
333BD283 0811041114 U S LVDD ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mohamed Thamim
1 Replies
10. AIX
Hi everybody,
I have a little problem with my AIX 6.1, PowerHA 6.1 LVM mirror. After problem with SAN pathing of our one Datacenter, I have LV at stale state.
# lsvg cpsdata2vg
VOLUME GROUP: cpsdata2vg VG IDENTIFIER: 00fb518c00004c0000000169445f4c2c
VG STATE: ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Necronomic
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
fixmount
FIXMOUNT(8) System Manager's Manual FIXMOUNT(8)
NAME
fixmount - fix remote mount entries
SYNOPSIS
fixmount [ -adervq ] [ -h name ] host ...
DESCRIPTION
fixmount is a variant of showmount(8) that can delete bogus mount entries in remote mountd(8C) daemons. The actions specified by the
options are performed for each host in turn.
OPTIONS
-a -d -e
These options work as in showmount(8) except that only entries pertaining to the local host are printed.
-r Removes those remote mount entries on host that do not correspond to current mounts, i.e., which are left-over from a crash or are
the result of improper mount protocol. The actuality of mounts is verified using the entries in /etc/mtab.
-v Verify remote mounts. Similar to -r except that only a notification message is printed for each bogus entry found. The remote
mount table is not changed.
-A Issues a command to the remote mountd declaring that ALL of its filesystems have been unmounted. This should be used with caution,
as it removes all remote mount entries pertaining to the local system, whether or not any filesystems are still mounted locally.
-q Be quiet. Suppresses error messages due to timeouts and "Program not registered", i.e., due to remote hosts not supporting RPC or
not running mountd.
-h name
Pretend the local hostname is name. This is useful after the local hostname has been changed and rmtab entries using the old name
remain on a remote machine. Unfortunately, most mountd's won't be able to successfully handle removal of such entries, so this
option is useful in combination with -v only.
This option also saves time as comparisons of remotely recorded and local hostnames by address are avoided.
FILES
/etc/mtab List of current mounts.
/etc/rmtab Backup file for remote mount entries on NFS server.
SEE ALSO
showmount(8), mtab(5), rmtab(5), mountd(8C).
BUGS
No attempt is made to verify the information in /etc/mtab itself.
Since swap file mounts are not recorded in /etc/mtab, a heuristic specific to SunOS is used to determine whether such a mount is actual
(replacing the string "swap" with "root" and verifying the resulting path).
Symbolic links on the server will cause the path in the remote entry to differ from the one in /etc/mtab. To catch those cases, a filesys-
tem is also deemed mounted if its local mount point is identical to the remote entry. I.e., on a SunOS diskless client,
server:/export/share/sunos.4.1.1 is actually /usr/share. Since the local mount point is /usr/share as well this will be handled correctly.
There is no way to clear a stale entry in a remote mountd after the local hostname (or whatever reverse name resolution returns for it) has
been changed. To take care of these cases, the remote /etc/rmtab file has to be edited and mountd restarted.
The RPC timeouts for mountd calls can only be changed by recompiling. The defaults are 2 seconds for client handle creation and 5 seconds
for RPC calls.
26 Feb 1993 FIXMOUNT(8)