08-24-2009
Afaik there is no priority with the disks in a mirror. Is there any problem you encountered?
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In HP-UX 11.00
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How do I know, which all disks are mirrored? any command?
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hi
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Follwing up on what I was working on yesterday, I noticed that at this thread, someone was suggesting that you WOULDN'T want to mirror DUMP. When I boot with my current secondary disk (because I didn't mirror DUMP) I get an error indicating that DUMP isn't there. Why wouldn't I want to mirror... (1 Reply)
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Hello All,
Am trynig to identify if the local HD's on our BL860 (running 11v3) are indeed mirrored to each other.
Cheers,
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Discussion started by: Cameron
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7. Solaris
# metastat
d1: Mirror
Submirror 0: d11
State: Okay
Submirror 1: d12
State: Okay
Pass: 1
Read option: roundrobin (default)
Write option: parallel (default)
Size: 14582208 blocks (7.0 GB)
d11: Submirror of d1
State: Okay
Size: 14582208 blocks... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Exposure
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8. Solaris
So I have mirrored disk already set up from c1t0d0 to c1t1d0. Is there some special procedures that I need to do before I do and then try to boot from the mirrored disk? I am using a V490 if that helps... (7 Replies)
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9. AIX
I want to increase the size of /tmp by 1GB
I know that the command is
chfs -a size=+1G /tmp
But the rootvg is mirrored and when I do a lsvg -p rootvg, I could see 2 disks.
Will there be any impact if I increase the size of /tmp when the rootvg is mirrored ?
Please advise. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: newtoaixos
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10. AIX
Hi all,
I need to extend a lv, but unfortunately I do not have enough space on my mirrored Volume group.
I've planned to add 2 more disks to this vg (for mirroring)
But ... what's the next steps to extend my lv using these 2 disks with a valid mirroring ?
1. extendvg myvg disk1 disk2... (3 Replies)
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LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
iostat
iostat(1) General Commands Manual iostat(1)
Name
iostat - report I/O statistics
Syntax
iostat [ -c ] [ -t ] [ disknames ] [ interval ] [ count ]
Description
The command reports I/O statistics for terminals, disks and cpus. For terminals the number of input and output characters are counted.
For disks the number of 512 byte blocks per second and number of transfers per second are displayed. For cpus, it provides the percentage
of time the system has spent in user mode, in user mode running low priority (niced) processes, in system mode, and idling. On multipro-
cessor systems these cpu statistics represent a cumulative summary of all the cpus.
The optional disknames argument causes disk statistics to be displayed for the specified disks. If this argument is not specified then
disk statistics will be displayed for the first 3 disks only.
The optional interval argument causes to report once each interval seconds. The first report is for all time since a reboot and each sub-
sequent report is for the last interval only.
The optional count argument restricts the number of reports.
Options
-c Displays the percentage of time each cpu spent in user mode, running low priority (nice'd) processes, in system mode, and idling.
-t Displays the number of characters read from and written to terminals.
Examples
This example will cause cpu and disk statistics for the 5 disks ra0, ra1, ra2, ra3, and ra4.
iostat ra0 ra1 ra2 ra3 ra4
This example will cause cpu, terminal, and disk statistics for ra0 to be displayed and updated every 2 seconds.
iostat -t ra0 2
Files
See Also
vmstat(1), cpustat(1)
iostat(1)