Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Sun M5000 servers diaster recovery plan Post 302523429 by rbadillarx on Thursday 19th of May 2011 12:37:35 AM
Old 05-19-2011
Hi aixlover:
Take your time, also keep in mind that with 1 storage you have to use double luns to acomplish DR plan and nothing will help if the storage fails. If your storage have capabilities like shadow/lun cloning it will be easier (and faster).

And I don't expect nothing beyond a great feedback of ideas; so a big thanks is good enough as diamonds. So don't worry.

PD: Standby BD; it's call poor mans Oracle Dataguard. So the main DB is in archive mode; that archive are transported/copied to a Standby BD (another machine and BD instance which is off; until you have to load the archives) depending of your needs;
the Standby is just 1minute off the main BD.
This User Gave Thanks to rbadillarx For This Post:
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Sun Solaris Disaster Recovery Plan ...

Hi all, I'm new in this domain, and on this operating system, but in my job, i have to find a way to make a disaster recovery plan for our server (sun solaris) which has the oracle database. I don't have any standby servers to be used for data replication, i only want to use CD's to put on... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sam212
4 Replies

2. Solaris

M5000 servers - XSCF functions

Hi all A couple of new M5000 servers will be arriving soon and I need to work out how to configure the underlying domains. It will come with 4 x CPUS, 32 Gb of memory, 4 x HD, 2 x IOtrays. Reading the XSCF manual, I can configure the item into 2 domains, something about uni / quad xsb.... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: sbk1972
9 Replies

3. AIX

Plan to shutdown servers

Hello everyone I need to shutdown all my servers and my storage. I would like to hear your opinions about this. This is my little plan about all this. 1.-Stop the applications 2.-Stop the webservers 3.-Stop the ihs 4.-Stop the databases 5.-Verify no process are running 6.-Close the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lo-lp-kl
1 Replies

4. Solaris

XSCF prompt disappeared, Sun M5000

Hi, I've got an issue here: After I logon to the xscf prompt of this Sun M5000 and did 'XSCF> version -c xcp', the xscf prompt disappeared. I can't get it back and can't log out. exit rebootxscf logout #. #> #> ~# ~# exit sendbreak exit I tried to set the Mode Switch to the service... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Sun M5000 hardware domain creation - How to keep current OS?

Hi, This Sun M5000 currently has a single domain (0) created. Solaris 10 is installed on this domain with some local zones. Now we need to add a secondary hardware domain (1) to this M5000. My question: Can we keep the current OS settings on domain 0 when adding the secondary domain 1? ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
0 Replies

6. Solaris

Sun M5000 hardware domain creation - How to keep current OS?

Hi, This Sun M5000 currently has a single domain (0) created. Solaris 10 is installed on this domain with some local zones. Now we need to add a secondary hardware domain (1) to this M5000. My question: Can we keep the current OS settings on domain 0 when adding the secondary domain 1? Thank... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
5 Replies

7. Solaris

Sun M5000, xscf showdevices questions

Hi, I've configured this Sun M5000 to use two system domains (added a second domain to it). The following is the info about the settings. The showdevices command can't show devices on domain 1 because Solaris is not loaded on it yet. My question: How can I confirm the hardware devices such as... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
5 Replies

8. Hardware

Sun/Oracle M5000 Question

I have an M5K with disk issues I'm trying to troubleshoot, and it's causing me some confusion. I know the host has four on-board HDDs, but the format command's output shows c0t0d0, c0t1d0, c3t0d0, and c3t1d0. cfgadm -al shows c0t3d0 as the DVD-ROM drive, and c1 and c2 as SAN disks. Confused yet? ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: desertdenizen
2 Replies
DPMSSetTimeouts(3)						    X FUNCTIONS 						DPMSSetTimeouts(3)

NAME
DPMSSetTimeouts - permits applications to set the timeout values used by the X server for DPMS timings SYNOPSIS
cc [ flag ... ] file ... -lXext [ library ... ] #include <X11/extensions/dpms.h> Status DPMSSetTimeouts ( Display *display, CARD16 standby, CARD16 suspend, CARD16 off ); ARGUMENTS
display Specifies the connection to the X server standby Specifies the new standby timeout in seconds suspend Specifies the new suspend timeout in seconds off Specifies the new off timeout in seconds DESCRIPTION
The DPMSSetTimeouts function permits applications to set the timeout values used by the X server for Display Power Management Signaling (DPMS) timings. The value standby is the amount of inactivity time, in seconds, before standby mode is invoked. The actual effects of this mode are depen- dent on the characteristics of the monitor and frame buffer card. Standby mode is implemented by shutting off the horizontal sync signal, and pulsing the vertical sync signal. Standby mode provides the quickest monitor recovery time. Note also that many monitors implement this mode identical to suspend mode. A value of zero disables the standby mode. The value suspend is the amount of time of inactivity, in seconds, before the second level of power savings is invoked. Suspend mode's physical and electrical characteristics are implementation defined. For DPMS compliant hardware, setting the suspend mode is implemented by pulsing the horizontal sync signal and shutting off the vertical sync signal. In general, suspend mode recovery is considered to be slower than standby mode, but faster than off mode. However it may vary from monitor to monitor. As noted above, many monitors implement this mode identical to the standby mode. A value of zero disables this mode. The value off is the amount of time of inactivity,in seconds, before the third and final level of power savings is invoked. Off mode's physical and electrical characteristics are implementation defined. In DPMS compliant hardware, it is implemented by shutting off both hor- izontal and vertical sync signals, resulting in powering down of the monitor. Recovery time is implementation dependent. Usually the recovery time is very close to the power-up time of the monitor. A value of zero disables this mode. Chronologically, standby mode occurs before or simultaneously with suspend mode, and suspend mode must occur before or simultaneously with off mode. Therefore, non-zero mode timeout values must be greater than or equal to the timeout values of earlier modes. If inconsistent values are supplied, a BadValue error will result. RETURN VALUES
TRUE The DPMSSetTimeouts function returns TRUE when the function has succeeded. ERRORS
BadValue An argument is out of range. SEE ALSO
DPMSCapable(3), DPMSInfo(3), DPMSGetTimeouts(3) X Version 11 libXext 1.1.1 DPMSSetTimeouts(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:53 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy