11-19-2009
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Having first encountered LVM in HP-UX and now experimenting with it in Redhat and Gentoo, I am wondering, when is it actually good practice to use LVM? Obviously LVM doesn't work for boot partitions, so that question is a pretty easy answer: Not for /boot in Linux.
While trying to figure out... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: deckard
1 Replies
2. AIX
Sorry for the noob question; my experience is with Solaris.
Am I reading this right? Are these disks completely unused? Not possibly raw disks for informix or something?
hdisk5 0K-08-ff-0,1 Optimal RAID 10 Array 285.7GB
pdisk20 0K-08-00-2,0 Active Array Member 142.8GB... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: filosmith
2 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi All,
I created an lvm filesystem with a name with dash in the middle, like xxx-yyy (note, that it's only one dash).
I was able to create it smoothly with this instructions.
lvcreate -L 1G uservg -n xxx-yyy
ls /dev/uservg/xxx-yyy (check)
mkfs.ext3 /dev/uservg/xxx-yyy
mount... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: itik
1 Replies
4. Red Hat
Hi,
can we create logical volume from 2 different volume
groups. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gopalredhat
1 Replies
5. HP-UX
Hi,
I'm new to HP-UX.
I have LVM on /var with 92Gig. I would like to reduce it to create another LVM for Oracle client with 800 meg or so. How to do it. I'm running 11.iv3
Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lamoul
4 Replies
6. AIX
i have os 5.1 and i do mirror with hdisk0 and hdisk1 on rootvg
at the end i get error in mail that:
At least one partition mirror is broken please call sysadmin
hd5 boot 1 2 2 closed/stale N/A
the other fs seems ok and sync
what to do about the hd5??? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: amitt74
4 Replies
7. Red Hat
Hi,
I have extended the logical drive on my SMART ARRAY on a BL460 C class blade from 72G to 300G (disk upgrade RAID0+1).
It went fine and the new larger disks have now sync'ed up.
I now need to create additional disk space on my linux OS (RH) via LVM but I am unable to see the additional... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Duffs22
9 Replies
8. Linux
Hi ,
I have 500 GB hard drive in my office server, previous employee installed fedora in to it, with 50 GB / and 120 GB (/opt/backup 15GB, /opt/test 5GB so on) . i have 180 GB free space left , so I have created LVM in 180 GB and moved all data from 120 GB to 180 .
Now i need to create lvm in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ram5019
1 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Guys,
I m using redhat 6, I have installed root partition as non-LVM .
Is there any way i can convert it to LVM? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pinga123
1 Replies
10. AIX
Hello,
I need some help, it is slightly urgent so any help is appreciated.
We were doing a data migration, during a migratepv command, our SAN ran out of quota space and locked all of the filesystems, now I'm left with a few errors and am not able to do migratepv again.
/:migratepv... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BG_JrAdmin
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mkqdisk
mkqdisk(8) Quorum Disk Management mkqdisk(8)
NAME
mkqdisk - Cluster Quorum Disk Utility
WARNING
Use of this command can cause the cluster to malfunction.
SYNOPSIS
mkqdisk [-?|-h] | [-L] | [-f label] [-c device -l label] [-d [-d ...]]
DESCRIPTION
The mkqdisk command is used to create a new quorum disk or display existing quorum disks accessible from a given cluster node.
OPTIONS
-c device -l label
Initialize a new cluster quorum disk. This will destroy all data on the given device. If a cluster is currently using that device
as a quorum disk, the entire cluster will malfunction. Do not run this on an active cluster when qdiskd is running. Only one
device on the SAN should ever have the given label; using multiple different devices is currently not supported (it is expected a
RAID array is used for quorum disk redundancy). The label can be any textual string up to 127 characters - and is therefore enough
space to hold a UUID created with uuidgen(1).
-f label
Find the cluster quorum disk with the given label and display information about it.
-L Display information on all accessible cluster quorum disks.
-d Increase debugging level. Specify multiple times for more information. Currently, specifying more than twice has no effect.
SEE ALSO
qdisk(5), qdiskd(8), uuidgen(1)
July 2006 mkqdisk(8)