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Operating Systems AIX How to distribute paging space among multiple PV Post 302083816 by cpmurray on Tuesday 8th of August 2006 02:43:49 AM
Old 08-08-2006
outta,
Your paging spaces are already mirrored onto both hdisk0 and hdisk1, lsps is just reporting that they reside on hdisk0. If you did loose hdisk0, the box would crash, but you should be able to just start the machine up and everything should be ok. If this is all the disk you have, remove paging00 and increase the size of hd6, as it's not recommended to have two paging devices on the same disk. If you do have another volume group, create a new paging device on it, and remove paging00

On a slightly related topic, what is you primary dump device, as if hd6 is your primary dump device I don't think it is supported, as the dump device cannot be mirrored.

Regards
Craig Murray
 

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DUMPON(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 DUMPON(8)

NAME
dumpon -- specify a device for crash dumps SYNOPSIS
dumpon [-v] special_file dumpon [-v] off dumpon [-v] -l DESCRIPTION
The dumpon utility is used to specify a device where the kernel can save a crash dump in the case of a panic. Calls to dumpon normally occur from the system multi-user initialization file /etc/rc, controlled by the ``dumpdev'' variable in the boot time configuration file /etc/rc.conf. The default type of kernel crash dump is the mini crash dump. Mini crash dumps hold only memory pages in use by the kernel. Alternatively, full memory dumps can be enabled by setting the debug.minidump sysctl(8) variable to 0. For systems using full memory dumps, the size of the specified dump device must be at least the size of physical memory. Even though an additional 64 kB header is added to the dump, the BIOS for a platform typically holds back some memory, so it is not usually necessary to size the dump device larger than the actual amount of RAM available in the machine. Also, when using full memory dumps, the dumpon utility will refuse to enable a dump device which is smaller than the total amount of physical memory as reported by the hw.physmem sysctl(8) vari- able. The -l flag causes dumpon to print the current dump device or _PATH_DEVNULL ("/dev/null") if no device is configured. The -v flag causes dumpon to be verbose about its activity. IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
Since a panic(9) condition may occur in a situation where the kernel cannot trust its internal representation of the state of any given file system, one of the system swap devices, and not a device containing a file system, should be used as the dump device. The dumpon utility operates by opening special_file and making a DIOCSKERNELDUMP ioctl(2) request on it to save kernel crash dumps. If special_file is the text string: ``off'', dumpon performs a DIOCSKERNELDUMP ioctl(2) on /dev/null and thus instructs the kernel not to save crash dumps. Since dumpon cannot be used during kernel initialization, the dumpdev variable of loader(8) must be used to enable dumps for system panics which occur during kernel initialization. FILES
/dev/{ada,da}?s?b standard swap areas /etc/rc.conf boot-time system configuration SEE ALSO
fstab(5), rc.conf(5), config(8), init(8), loader(8), rc(8), savecore(8), swapon(8), panic(9) HISTORY
The dumpon utility appeared in FreeBSD 2.1. BUGS
Because the file system layer is already dead by the time a crash dump is taken, it is not possible to send crash dumps directly to a file. BSD
October 8, 2014 BSD
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