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Full Discussion: AIX disaster recovery
Operating Systems AIX AIX disaster recovery Post 302130402 by johnf on Monday 6th of August 2007 05:18:57 AM
Old 08-06-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by tb0ne
I took the above advice and set up a NIM server and took a sysb via NIM. Now my question is, if there's a disk failure on a box and you aren't able to access the OS, how do you go about restoring a NIM sysb image?
The same way you setup the system with NIM but declare a different NIM resource. Bootp the machine after declaring the NIM master as the server in the IP configuration in SMS on the client. On the NIM server declare the machine as a NIM client with the MKSYSB as the NIM resource. It can all be driven from SMITTY.
 

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

NAME
ypset -- tell ypbind(8) which YP server process to use SYNOPSIS
ypset [-h host] [-d domain] server DESCRIPTION
Ypset tells the ypbind(8) process on the current machine which YP server process to communicate with. If server is down or is not running a YP server process, it is not discovered until a YP client process attempts to access a YP map, at which time ypbind(8) tests the binding and takes appropriate action. Ypset is most useful for binding a YP client that is not on the same broadcast network as the closest YP server, but can also be used for debugging a local network's YP configuration, testing specific YP client programs, or binding to a specific server when there are many servers on the local network supplying YP maps. The options are as follows: -h host Set the YP binding on host instead of the local machine. -d domain Use the YP domain domain instead of the default domain as returned by domainname(1). SEE ALSO
domainname(1), ypbind(8), ypcat(1), ypmatch(1), yppoll(8), ypwhich(1), yp(8) AUTHOR
Theo de Raadt BSD
October 25, 1994 BSD
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