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Operating Systems HP-UX Set the Serial Number in HPUX? Post 302296636 by irinotecan on Wednesday 11th of March 2009 01:38:20 PM
Old 03-11-2009
Yup, it prints everything but the serial number:

Code:
#./print_manifest
System Information

    Your Hewlett-Packard computer has software installed and 
    configured as follows.

    The system was created January 19, 2009, 15:03:37 EST.
    It was created with Ignite-UX revision B.4.4.27.

-------------------------------------------------------------
NOTE: You should retain this information for future reference.
-------------------------------------------------------------


System Hardware

    Model:              9000/785/C3750
    Main Memory:        1536 MB
    Processors:         1
    OS mode:            64 bit
    LAN hardware ID:    0x00306E49A0BD
    Software ID:        2014355092
    Keyboard Language:  USB_PS2_DIN_US_English

    Storage devices                  HW Path           Interface          
    HP 36.4GMAU3036NC 34732 Mb       10/0/15/1.6.0     SCSI C896 Ultra2 Wide LVD 

    I/O Interfaces 
    Class          H/W Path       Driver         Description             
    lan            10/0/12/0      btlan          HP PCI 10/100Base-TX Core 
    audio          10/0/13/0      audio          Built-in Audio      
    ext_bus        10/0/14/0      side           IDE                 
    tty            10/0/14/1/1    asio0          Built-in RS-232C    
    tty            10/0/14/1/2    asio0          Built-in RS-232C    
    ext_bus        10/0/14/1/3    SCentIf        Built-in Parallel Interface 
    usb            10/0/14/2      hcd            Built-in USB Interface 
    ext_bus        10/0/15/0      c720           SCSI C896 Ultra Wide Single-Ended 
    ext_bus        10/0/15/1      c720           SCSI C896 Ultra2 Wide LVD 
    graphics       10/6/2/0       graph3         PCI Display (103c108b) 


Installed Software

    Your system was installed with HP-UX version B.11.11.

    Your system has the following software products installed and 
    configured on the system disk drive(s).  

    Product          Revision          Description                             
    B8111AA          1.2.2.15.00       Java 2 RTE for HP-UX (700/800), PA1.1 + PA2.0 Add On 
[SNIP]
LVM File System Configuration

    This system is configured with Logical Volume Manager (LVM) file systems.
    Refer to the File System layout section for information on the LVM layout.


JFS File System Configuration

    This system is configured with a Journaled File System (referred to  
    as either JFS or VXFS).  Refer to the File System layout section for
    information on JFS/VXFS file systems.


Disk layout

    LVM disk                   Device file        HW Addr      size   vol. grp
    HP 36.4GMAU3036NC          /dev/dsk/c3t6d0    10/0/15/1.6.0 34732  /dev/vg00


File System layout

    LVM Device file            mount point    size  fs type
    /dev/vg00:                                           
[SNIP]
Swap configuration

    type       size  priority  device/location
    dev        3072     1      /dev/vg00/lvol2


Kernel Configuration

    The following drivers or parameters are configured into your system's
    kernel.  After installing HP-UX, use the sam(1m) command to configure
    the following items into the kernel:
	default_disk_ir             1
	STRMSGSZ                65535
	nstrpty                    60
	maxswapchunks            1536


System Information

    The following parameters were set on the configured target:
	hostname:           InControl10
	IP address:         10.222.22.130
	subnet mask:        255.255.255.0
	gateway IP address: 10.222.22.1
	time zone:          PST8PDT
	DNS domain name:    HQ.INCONTROL
	DNS IP address:     10.222.22.124

 

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vxres_lvmroot(1M)														 vxres_lvmroot(1M)

NAME
vxres_lvmroot - restore LVM root disk from Veritas Volume Manager root disk SYNOPSIS
vxres_lvmroot [-v] [-b] [-D] new_disk_da_name vxres_lvmroot [-v] [-b] [-D] [-p Pool_1,Pool_2,...] new_disk_da_name DESCRIPTION
The vxres_lvmroot command initializes the specified physical disks as a Logical Volume Manager (LVM) root disks under HP-UX. The resulting LVM root volume group is named vg## where ## is the first number starting at 00 that creates a unique LVM volume group name. The specified disks must have enough space to accommodate the total size of all of the volumes in the VxVM root disk group. The new LVM root volume group is then populated with volumes of the same size and type as the volumes from the existing VxVM root disk group. Volumes named rootvol, swapvol, standvol, usrvol, tmpvol, homevol, optvol and dumpvol on the VxVM root disk are replaced with the LVM standard volume names lvol3, lvol2, lvol1, lvol6, lvol5, lvol4, lvol8, and lvol2 respectively. The names of other volumes on the new root volume group are generated by determining the next available lvoln name for as many volumes as exist on the VxVM root disk group. As each LVM volume is made, the data from each VxVM volume is copied to the equivalent LVM volume. For volumes containing file systems, the copy is performed using the cpio command. For volumes that do not contain file systems, the data is copied using the dd command. To minimize disk arm movement, volume copies are performed serially in the foreground. To ensure that no data corruption has occurred during copying, the fsck command is run on each freshly populated file system. The second form of the vxres_lvmroot command shown in the SYNOPSIS section allows a multiple disk VxVM root disk group to be copied. This form of the command also supports striped volumes. The argument to the -p option is a comma-separated list of additional disks that are required to copy a multiple disk VxVM root disk group. Before commencing copying, vxres_lvmroot determines the number of disks that are required. If insufficient disks are specified, vxres_lvmroot displays how many disks are needed before exiting with an error. After all of the volumes have been copied, the mkboot command is run on the new disk to set it up as a bootable LVM disk under HP-UX. Once this is complete, the root and stand file systems on the new disk are temporarily mounted, and the following files updated to reflect the new environment: o /etc/fstab on the new root file system is updated to reflect the paths to the block device nodes that correspond to the LVM volumes. The old information about mounting VxVM volumes is preserved at the end of the file in comment lines. o /stand/bootconf is regenerated in the new stand file system. The contents of this file define the path of the block device node cor- responding to the new root disk together with an indication that it is an LVM boot disk, for example: l /dev/dsk/c1t5d0 OPTIONS
-b Invokes the setboot command to change the primary and alternate boot device settings. The primary boot device is set to the newly cloned LVM root disk. The alternate boot device is set to the original VxVM root disk. If the -v option is also specified, infor- mation on the setting of the primary and alternate boot devices is displayed. -D Uses the vxdump(1M) and vxrestore(1M) commands to copy VxFS file systems, and the dump(1M) and restore(1M) commands to copy HFS file systems. The default method of copying file systems is to use the find(1M) and cpio(1M) commands. However, if one or more of the file systems to be copied contain files with "holes" (that is, files that appear to be very large, but which are sparse and contain very little storage), this may exceed the capability of the target file system to copy the files using find and cpio. One symp- tom of this condition is to receive a "file system full" indication on the target file system while copying. (Whereas the find and cpio commands assume that a file's size correctly represents the storage required, the vxdump, vxrestore, dump and restore commands copy a sparse file as it appears in the source file system.) If a "file system full" condition is indicated for one of the target file systems, start vxres_lvmroot again with the -D option specified. Note: the vxdump, vxrestore, dump and restore commands are not well suited for running from a shell script. If you interrupt the script (for example, by pressing Ctrl-C), these commands prompt you to ask whether you really want to continue or abort. The out- put from the dump commands is verbose and so is redirected to a file. As this redirection would hide any continue/abort prompt, and make the program appear to hang, the interrupt signal is temporarily disabled while the copy is in progress (a message to this effect is displayed if the -v option is specified). -v Outputs verbose messages including a timestamp that indicates major operations being performed. Since copying the data on a root disk can take a considerable amount of time, this gives an indication of the progress being made. ARGUMENTS
new_disk_da_name Specifies the device name (disk access name) of the physical disk that is to become the LVM root disk. EXAMPLES
This example shows the vxres_lvmroot command invoked in its simplest form: /etc/vx/bin/vxres_lvmroot c5t1d0 This example shows the behavior of the vxres_lvmroot command when invoked with the -v (verbose) option: # /etc/vx/bin/vxres_lvmroot -v -b c5t13d0 vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Gathering information on the current VxVM root config vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Checking specified disk(s) for usability vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Preparing disk c5t13d0 as an LVM root disk vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Creating LVM Volume Group vg00 vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/standvol (hfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol1 vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Cloning /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/swapvol (swap) to /dev/vg00/lvol2 vxres_lvmroot 18:12: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/rootvol (vxfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol3 vxres_lvmroot 18:13: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/homevol (vxfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol4 vxres_lvmroot 18:13: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/tmpvol (vxfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol5 vxres_lvmroot 18:13: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/usrvol (vxfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol6 vxres_lvmroot 18:33: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/optvol (vxfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol7 vxres_lvmroot 18:41: Copying /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/varvol (vxfs) to /dev/vg00/lvol8 vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Setting up disk c5t13d0 as an LVM boot disk vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Installing fstab and fixing dev nodes on new root FS vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Current setboot values: vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Primary: 0/4/0/1.10.0 vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Alternate: 0/4/0/1.12.0 vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Making disk c5t13d0 (0/4/0/1.13.0) the primary boot disk vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Making disk c5t10d0 (0/4/0/1.10.0) the alternate boot disk vxres_lvmroot 18:45: Disk c5t13d0 is now an LVM (VG vg00) rootable boot disk NOTES
If the vxres_lvmroot command aborts for any reason, or if you interrupt the command during execution (unless this is inhibited by the -D option), an attempt is made to clean up the LVM objects that had been generated up to the time of the abort or interruption. If an LVM object cannot be removed, an explanatory message is displayed. SEE ALSO
cpio(1), dd(1), dump(1M), fsck(1M), restore(1M), setboot(1M), vxbootsetup(1M), vxcp_lvmroot(1M), vxdestroy_lvmroot(1M), vxdump(1M), vxre- store(1M) VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vxres_lvmroot(1M)
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