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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Long Distance UNIX (Solaris) Cloning ? Post 302157172 by HikerLT on Thursday 10th of January 2008 09:36:06 AM
Old 01-10-2008
Long Distance UNIX (Solaris) Cloning ?

Need some advice and guidance for this UNIX beginner. Due to downsizing I have inherited the SysAdmin duties..(sigh). Please excuse and forgive me if I use the wrong terms below....

Situation:

We have UNIX ( Solaris 7/8/9( it varies) on Sun Ultra 10's) servers located at several global locations - in Malaysia, Mexico, and South Carolina. We access these from our New England location via the corporate network, thru firewalls located at these sites.

At each of the sites, we have a UNIX server ( Ultra 10 running Solaris) that acts as a gateway server, that bridges from the corporate network, to a isolated "Test Engineering" network within the remote factory. Hanging off of this "Test Eng Network", are more Ultra-10 Servers, used as NMS Network Management System servers to run Systems level traffic tests on test equipment.

Goal: Is to make duplicate clones of each of these servers hard drives, so if ( and When) they die and crash, we can rapidly power up and attach the cloned server ( with duplicate hard drives) and prevent downtime.

Problem:
1) These Ultra-10's have 2 hard drives in them, attached to the IDE bus connections - thus no way to attach a new fresh drive and do a "DD" duplication, as both IDE connections are in use..

2) Due to the remote location , and lack of expertise in IT capability there, we also can't rely on the local people to dismantle and attach
the fresh drive to do a DD clone anyways - too risky.

3) We want to avoid powering down these servers, as we have had problems in the past of them rebooting without hard drive crashes due to their age.

My Question:

Is there a way to make a copy of each hard drive, by doing a copy over the network?. Would this involve partitioning the fresh drive( as an attachment 2nd drive on a 1 drive Solaris system in my lab) to match the same partitions as the ones in the remote global location that we want to copy , and then copying all of the files in each partition/directory.??

Or is there a way to do the equivalent of a DD cloning operation between 2 systems that are on a global network...
??


Any ideas or advice is appreciated.!!
 

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HALT(8) 						Linux System Administrator's Manual						   HALT(8)

NAME
halt, reboot, poweroff - stop the system. SYNOPSIS
/sbin/halt [-n] [-w] [-d] [-f] [-i] [-p] [-h] /sbin/reboot [-n] [-w] [-d] [-f] [-i] /sbin/poweroff [-n] [-w] [-d] [-f] [-i] [-h] DESCRIPTION
Halt notes that the system is being brought down in the file /var/log/wtmp, and then either tells the kernel to halt, reboot or power-off the system. If halt or reboot is called when the system is not in runlevel 0 or 6, in other words when it's running normally, shutdown will be invoked instead (with the -h or -r flag). For more info see the shutdown(8) manpage. The rest of this manpage describes the behaviour in runlevels 0 and 6, that is when the systems shutdown scripts are being run. OPTIONS
-n Don't sync before reboot or halt. Note that the kernel and storage drivers may still sync. -w Don't actually reboot or halt but only write the wtmp record (in the /var/log/wtmp file). -d Don't write the wtmp record. The -n flag implies -d. -f Force halt or reboot, don't call shutdown(8). -i Shut down all network interfaces just before halt or reboot. -h Put all hard drives on the system in stand-by mode just before halt or power-off. -p When halting the system, switch off the power. This is the default when halt is called as poweroff. DIAGNOSTICS
If you're not the superuser, you will get the message `must be superuser'. NOTES
Under older sysvinit releases , reboot and halt should never be called directly. From release 2.74 on halt and reboot invoke shutdown(8) if the system is not in runlevel 0 or 6. This means that if halt or reboot cannot find out the current runlevel (for example, when /var/run/utmp hasn't been initialized correctly) shutdown will be called, which might not be what you want. Use the -f flag if you want to do a hard halt or reboot. The -h flag puts all hard disks in standby mode just before halt or power-off. Right now this is only implemented for IDE drives. A side effect of putting the drive in stand-by mode is that the write cache on the disk is flushed. This is important for IDE drives, since the kernel doesn't flush the write cache itself before power-off. The halt program uses /proc/ide/hd* to find all IDE disk devices, which means that /proc needs to be mounted when halt or poweroff is called or the -h switch will do nothing. AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl SEE ALSO
shutdown(8), init(8) Nov 6, 2001 HALT(8)
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