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Full Discussion: HP9000 I70 E35 E55 manuals
Operating Systems HP-UX HP9000 I70 E35 E55 manuals Post 302159342 by Perderabo on Thursday 17th of January 2008 02:14:28 PM
Old 01-17-2008
Yes, I am sure that the E-series manuals were on HP's website. They were never at docs.hp.com but rather at the customer care site. At the top of this forum is a sticky thread with HP links. Read it. I'm not as positive about the I-class since I never looked for those specificly.

But there were operators and installation manuals available, not service manuals (which is what I wanted at the time). Only a few primitive indicator lights are on these boxes and they are obvious. The main indicator is a four character display. With an OS running, it will have FxyF. This display is under the control of firmware and when the OS runs, it instructs the firmware as to what to display. So all of the models are the same and that is why you should read the manuals I linked. I worked on E-class boxes for several years but I never read an E-class specific manual. These early models do not have hardware logs. Any logs are maintained by the OS and documented in the OS manuals.

And look at the dates on those HP journal articles annoucing these products and compare them to this PDF timeline. Even if PDF had been invented recently, there are scanners that can convert printed pages to PDF and other formats. HP might have access to one considering that they manufacture scanners. Lots of older material is available in PDF format.
 

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share(1M)                                                                                                                                share(1M)

NAME
share - make local resource available for mounting by remote systems SYNOPSIS
share [-F FSType] [-o specific_options] [-d description] [pathname] The share command exports, or makes a resource available for mounting, through a remote file system of type FSType. If the option -F FSType is omitted, the first file system type listed in /etc/dfs/fstypes is used as default. For a description of NFS specific options, see share_nfs(1M). pathname is the pathname of the directory to be shared. When invoked with no arguments, share displays all shared file sys- tems. -F FSType Specify the filesystem type. -o specific_options The specific_options are used to control access of the shared resource. (See share_nfs(1M) for the NFS specific options.) They may be any of the following: rw pathname is shared read/write to all clients. This is also the default behavior. rw=client[:client]... pathname is shared read/write only to the listed clients. No other systems can access pathname. ro pathname is shared read-only to all clients. ro=client[:client]... pathname is shared read-only only to the listed clients. No other systems can access pathname. Separate multiple options with commas. Separate multiple operands for an option with colons. See . -d description The -d flag may be used to provide a description of the resource being shared. Example 1: Sharing a Read-Only Filesystem This line will share the /disk file system read-only at boot time. share -F nfs -o ro /disk Example 2: Invoking Multiple Options The following command shares the filesystem /export/manuals, with members of the netgroup having read-only access and users on the speci- fied host having read-write access. share -F nfs -o ro=netgroup_name,rw=host1:host2:host3 /export/manuals /etc/dfs/dfstab list of share commands to be executed at boot time /etc/dfs/fstypes list of file system types, NFS by default /etc/dfs/sharetab system record of shared file systems See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ mountd(1M), nfsd(1M), share_nfs(1M), shareall(1M), unshare(1M), attributes(5) Export (old terminology): file system sharing used to be called exporting on SunOS 4.x, so the share command used to be invoked as exportfs(1B) or /usr/sbin/exportfs. If share commands are invoked multiple times on the same filesystem, the last share invocation supersedes the previous--the options set by the last share command replace the old options. For example, if read-write permission was given to usera on /somefs, then to give read- write permission also to userb on /somefs: example% share -F nfs -o rw=usera:userb /somefs This behavior is not limited to sharing the root filesystem, but applies to all filesystems. 9 Dec 2004 share(1M)
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