Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Raidz displays incorrect size Post 302375468 by jlliagre on Friday 27th of November 2009 10:11:38 PM
Old 11-27-2009
What Solaris release are you using (cat /etc/release) ?
Were these crashes kernel panics ?
Are crash dumps enabled (coreadm) ? If true, is there a crash dump to analyse (/var/crash/<hostname>/unix.x & vmcore.x) ?

While supported, booting off a USB stick is AFAIK not a usual practice. I would recommend to create instead a mirror with two of you disks and install Solaris on it.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Dual Displays

I have a TV and a monitor hooked up to my box. Right now the system is displaying all the information on the TV instead of the monitor, obviously I want to switch this, as the TV is very impracticle for everything other than watching movies. I thought I remembered a command I used to use that... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Synbios
2 Replies

2. HP-UX

Dual Displays HP-UX 10.20

Hello All! Where I work we have C3600's that have a video cards that have both DVI and Regular RBG type monitor ports on them. My question is: is it possible to spread my desktop across two monitors that are plugged into the one card much like you can do with NVIDIA software like NVIEW for... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: giftedone
0 Replies

3. Linux

Hostname displays incorrectly

hiii, in many of the linux machines i have tried this but the result is the same everywhere. if there are double letters in a hostname then that is displayed as single letter. e.g. if hostname is set to nepttune then login into the shell will display : NEPTUNE(admin)@/ $ hostname... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: shamik
15 Replies

4. AIX

who -r displays no output

Hello. I have an AIX machine at 6100-00. We had some strange activity since filling up /tmp. One symptom is that who -r displays no output. It doesn't hang just no output is displayed. We are going to boot the machine, but prior to that I'd like to dig a bit to see what may be causing the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: maficdan
0 Replies

5. Solaris

swap displays differently

A new x86 server was installed with 16G of memory. The swap space assigned in the prtvtoc is also 16G. But after the installation of the OS and verifying, noticed df -k output for swap shows as 30G. Other systems do not have this characteristic. Whats wrong in here?:eek: (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: incredible
4 Replies

6. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

ZFS Raidz not redundant?

My ZFS on debian media server just died in a power outage, the zpool status shows this: NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM tank UNAVAIL 0 0 0 insufficient replicas raidz1 UNAVAIL 0 0 0 corrupted data sda ONLINE 0 0 0 sdb ONLINE 0 0 0 sdf ONLINE 0 0 0 sdh ONLINE 0 0 0 sdi ONLINE 0 0 0 sdk ONLINE 0... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mastersarg
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ls -l displays size in KB, MB, GB?

Hi, ls -l displays the long listing of a file in 8 fields. Query: ------ Does ls -l display the filename size in KB or MB or GB? -rwxrwxr-x 1 xx dba 655 May 22 06:27 time Here 655 is KB or MB or GB? Many thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkatesht
2 Replies

8. Solaris

iSCSI disk showing incorrect size

Hi, I have a very frustrating issue! I hope you guys can assist When a disk is presented out the iSCSI target display a lower disk capacity SOLARIS VERSION is SOLARIS 10 05/09 Kernel Patch 139555-31 ISCSI Patch 119090-31, 141878-11 Unix Commands To discover Target bash-3.00# i... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: capitalexall
0 Replies

9. Solaris

ls -l displays output with an error

when i use ls command it works normal but when i using additional parameter with ls like ls -l , ls -a... it shows a error followed by the output. # ls -l ./hgfs: Operation not applicable total 12861 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jun 1 21:12 1 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: chidori
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Displays the text upward

I need to print out text from a file in the console up, you know someone like that? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: gizmo16
8 Replies
ZDB(8)							    BSD System Manager's Manual 						    ZDB(8)

NAME
zdb -- Display zpool debugging and consistency information SYNOPSIS
zdb [-CumdibcsDvhLMXFPA] [-e [-p path...]] [-t txg] [-U cache] [-I inflight I/Os] [-x dumpdir] poolname [object ...] zdb [-divPA] [-e [-p path...]] [-U cache] dataset [object ...] zdb -m [-MLXFPA] [-t txg] [-e [-p path...]] [-U cache] poolname zdb -R [-A] [-e [-p path...]] [-U cache] poolname poolname vdev:offset:size[:flags] zdb -S [-AP] [-e [-p path...]] [-U cache] poolname poolname zdb -l [-uA] device zdb -C [-A] [-U cache] DESCRIPTION
The zdb utility displays information about a ZFS pool useful for debugging and performs some amount of consistency checking. It is a not a general purpose tool and options (and facilities) may change. This is neither a fsck(8) nor a fsdb(8) utility. The output of this command in general reflects the on-disk structure of a ZFS pool, and is inherently unstable. The precise output of most invocations is not documented, a knowledge of ZFS internals is assumed. When operating on an imported and active pool it is possible, though unlikely, that zdb may interpret inconsistent pool data and behave erratically. OPTIONS
Display options: -b Display statistics regarding the number, size (logical, physical and allocated) and deduplication of blocks. -c Verify the checksum of all metadata blocks while printing block statistics (see -b). If specified multiple times, verify the checksums of all blocks. -C Display information about the configuration. If specified with no other options, instead display information about the cache file (/etc/zfs/zpool.cache). To specify the cache file to display, see -U If specified multiple times, and a pool name is also specified display both the cached configuration and the on-disk configuration. If specified multiple times with -e also display the configuration that would be used were the pool to be imported. -d Display information about datasets. Specified once, displays basic dataset information: ID, create transaction, size, and object count. If specified multiple times provides greater and greater verbosity. If object IDs are specified, display information about those specific objects only. -D Display deduplication statistics, including the deduplication ratio (dedup), compression ratio (compress), inflation due to the zfs copies property (copies), and an overall effective ratio (dedup * compress / copies). If specified twice, display a histogram of deduplication statistics, showing the allocated (physically present on disk) and refer- enced (logically referenced in the pool) block counts and sizes by reference count. If specified a third time, display the statistics independently for each deduplication table. If specified a fourth time, dump the contents of the deduplication tables describing duplicate blocks. If specified a fifth time, also dump the contents of the deduplication tables describing unique blocks. -h Display pool history similar to zpool history, but include internal changes, transaction, and dataset information. -i Display information about intent log (ZIL) entries relating to each dataset. If specified multiple times, display counts of each intent log transaction type. -l device Display the vdev labels from the specified device. If the -u option is also specified, also display the uberblocks on this device. -L Disable leak tracing and the loading of space maps. By default, zdb verifies that all non-free blocks are referenced, which can be very expensive. -m Display the offset, spacemap, and free space of each metaslab. When specified twice, also display information about the on-disk free space histogram associated with each metaslab. When specified three time, display the maximum contiguous free space, the in-core free space histogram, and the percentage of free space in each space map. When specified four times display every spacemap record. -M Display the offset, spacemap, and free space of each metaslab. When specified twice, also display information about the maximum con- tiguous free space and the percentage of free space in each space map. When specified three times display every spacemap record. -R poolname vdev:offset:size[:flags] Read and display a block from the specified device. By default the block is displayed as a hex dump, but see the description of the -r flag, below. The block is specified in terms of a colon-separated tuple vdev (an integer vdev identifier) offset (the offset within the vdev) size (the size of the block to read) and, optionally, flags (a set of flags, described below). b offset Print block pointer d Decompress the block e Byte swap the block g Dump gang block header i Dump indirect block r Dump raw uninterpreted block data -s Report statistics on zdb's I/O. Display operation counts, bandwidth, and error counts of I/O to the pool from zdb. -S Simulate the effects of deduplication, constructing a DDT and then display that DDT as with -DD. -u Display the current uberblock. Other options: -A Do not abort should any assertion fail. -AA Enable panic recovery, certain errors which would otherwise be fatal are demoted to warnings. -AAA Do not abort if asserts fail and also enable panic recovery. -e [-p path...] Operate on an exported pool, not present in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. The -p flag specifies the path under which devices are to be searched. -x dumpdir All blocks accessed will be copied to files in the specified directory. The blocks will be placed in sparse files whose name is the same as that of the file or device read. zdb can be then run on the generated files. Note that the -bbc flags are sufficient to access (and thus copy) all metadata on the pool. -F Attempt to make an unreadable pool readable by trying progressively older transactions. -I inflight I/Os Limit the number of outstanding checksum I/Os to the specified value. The default value is 200. This option affects the performance of the -c option. -P Print numbers in an unscaled form more amenable to parsing, eg. 1000000 rather than 1M. -t transaction Specify the highest transaction to use when searching for uberblocks. See also the -u and -l options for a means to see the avail- able uberblocks and their associated transaction numbers. -U cachefile Use a cache file other than /boot/zfs/zpool.cache. -v Enable verbosity. Specify multiple times for increased verbosity. -X Attempt 'extreme' transaction rewind, that is attempt the same recovery as -F but read transactions otherwise deemed too old. Specifying a display option more than once enables verbosity for only that option, with more occurrences enabling more verbosity. If no options are specified, all information about the named pool will be displayed at default verbosity. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Display the configuration of imported pool 'rpool' # zdb -C rpool MOS Configuration: version: 28 name: 'rpool' ... Example 2 Display basic dataset information about 'rpool' # zdb -d rpool Dataset mos [META], ID 0, cr_txg 4, 26.9M, 1051 objects Dataset rpool/swap [ZVOL], ID 59, cr_txg 356, 486M, 2 objects ... Example 3 Display basic information about object 0 in 'rpool/export/home' # zdb -d rpool/export/home 0 Dataset rpool/export/home [ZPL], ID 137, cr_txg 1546, 32K, 8 objects Object lvl iblk dblk dsize lsize %full type 0 7 16K 16K 15.0K 16K 25.00 DMU dnode Example 4 Display the predicted effect of enabling deduplication on 'rpool' # zdb -S rpool Simulated DDT histogram: bucket allocated referenced ______ ______________________________ ______________________________ refcnt blocks LSIZE PSIZE DSIZE blocks LSIZE PSIZE DSIZE ------ ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ ----- ----- ----- 1 694K 27.1G 15.0G 15.0G 694K 27.1G 15.0G 15.0G 2 35.0K 1.33G 699M 699M 74.7K 2.79G 1.45G 1.45G ... dedup = 1.11, compress = 1.80, copies = 1.00, dedup * compress / copies = 2.00 SEE ALSO
zfs(8), zpool(8) AUTHORS
This manual page is a mdoc(7) reimplementation of the illumos manual page zdb(1M), modified and customized for FreeBSD and licensed under the Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL). The mdoc(7) implementation of this manual page was initially written by Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org> and Marcelo Araujo <araujo@FreeBSD.org>. BSD
July 26, 2014 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:20 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy