Last week, I created a new BE using lucreate which I was able to successfully boot from and has been working fine sinxe.
I now want to revert to the original BE but luactivate gives me these errors:
They are indeed mounted which I did notice before but having not used lu before thought it was normal but now not sure. The original BE is on mirrored disks. The new BE is on one 50G slice on just one of those disks. Looking at the directory contents the .alt /home/oracle dir is actually being written to as well as the /home/oracle under the new BE.
:confused: Hi, does anyone here know how to compile and run C++ in UNIX environment? I am so desperate! Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks! (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a problem with a Unix server we do not adminster but have an application running on.
The problem is that overnight, files in the /user4/work directory revert to root ownership. This causes problems as we cannot process the files.
1) What would be causing files to revert to root... (1 Reply)
Hi guys,
thanks in advance for this easy answer.... :s
Ok I am trying to output the enviroment varable for host in Solaris. I have tried $HOST, $HOST_NAME, $HOSTNAME carn't find it anywhere, does someone want to put me out of my misary and tell me what it is??? :confused: :eek:
Thanks... (2 Replies)
What are the environment setting during a cron session?
I have HP-UX and I want to send the output/file from a script to several e-mail addresses. I want to create an env-var to store the e-mail addresses in my .profile, but I do not know if it will be visible when a script is executed in a cron. (4 Replies)
I need to save my enviroment variables,specially the $PATH.When I put it on .cshrc at next reboot I lost the configuration.How can avoid this?Thanks (2 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I am currently trying to program in java in unix platform for the first time, so far it is OK as long as I use class libraries which come with java distribution. Unfortunately when I try to use external libraries I have to use -classpath option which I rather not doing all the... (1 Reply)
Not how I expected my weekend to go.
My redhat server previously had perl 5.8.0 installed on it. Downloading a mysql utility, it asked for that and I blindly installed it. Broke a whole bunch of things. Now I'm hearing that I should revert back to my "system perl" because there may be further... (3 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I have the below command that will kill all the process of an environment,
lets say if I have reached to the location cont directory under which I want to kill multiple process so the command will be ....
kill -9 `ps -ef | grep cont | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}'`
Now please... (4 Replies)
After running
integrity -e
( may not have done this code thing correctly )
I got the following
.io/bootdisk/boot group root should be backup
mode 0600 should be 0440
.io/bootdisk/swap group root should be mem
... (3 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I am stuck on below issue.
in my .profile. I have two variable:
x=abc$123
t=xyz$
when running env command, I got below:
x=abc
t=xyz$
my OS is SunOS 5.10 sun4v sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise-T5220
I am wondering why t=xyz$ shows exactly value?
I try below: (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: ken6503
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
vfstab
vfstab(4) File Formats vfstab(4)NAME
vfstab - table of file system defaults
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/vfstab describes defaults for each file system. The information is stored in a table with the following column headings:
device device mount FS fsck mount mount
to mount to fsck point type pass at boot options
The fields in the table are space-separated and show the resource name (device to mount), the raw device to fsck (device to fsck), the
default mount directory (mount point), the name of the file system type (FS type), the number used by fsck to decide whether to check the
file system automatically (fsck pass), whether the file system should be mounted automatically by mountall (mount at boot), and the file
system mount options (mount options). (See respective mount file system man page below in SEE ALSO for mount options.) A '-' is used to
indicate no entry in a field. This may be used when a field does not apply to the resource being mounted.
The getvfsent(3C) family of routines is used to read and write to /etc/vfstab.
/etc/vfstab can be used to specify swap areas. An entry so specified, (which can be a file or a device), will automatically be added as a
swap area by the /sbin/swapadd script when the system boots. To specify a swap area, the device-to-mount field contains the name of the
swap file or device, the FS-type is "swap", mount-at-boot is "no" and all other fields have no entry.
EXAMPLES
The following are vfstab entries for various file system types supported in the Solaris operating environment.
Example 1: NFS and UFS Mounts
The following entry invokes NFS to automatically mount the directory /usr/local of the server example1 on the client's /usr/local directory
with read-only permission:
example1:/usr/local - /usr/local nfs - yes ro
The following example assumes a small departmental mail setup, in which clients mount /var/mail from a server mailsvr. The following entry
would be listed in each client's vfstab:
mailsvr:/var/mail - /var/mail nfs - yes intr,bg
The following is an example for a UFS file system in which logging is enabled:
/dev/dsk/c2t10d0s0 /dev/rdsk/c2t10d0s0 /export/local ufs 3 yes logging
See mount_nfs(1M) for a description of NFS mount options and mount_ufs(1M) for a description of UFS options.
Example 2: pcfs Mounts
The following example mounts a pcfs file system on a fixed hard disk on an x86 machine:
/dev/dsk/c1t2d0p0:c - /win98 pcfs - yes -
The example below mounts a Jaz drive on a SPARC machine. Normally, the volume management daemon (see vold(1M)) handles mounting of remov-
able media, obviating a vfstab entry. If you choose to specify a device that supports removable media in vfstab, be sure to set the mount-
at-boot field to no, as below. Such an entry presumes you are not running vold.
/dev/dsk/c1t2d0s2:c - /jaz pcfs - no -
For removable media on a SPARC machine, the convention for the slice portion of the disk identifier is to specify s2, which stands for the
entire medium.
For pcfs file systems on x86 machines, note that the disk identifier uses a p (p0) and a logical drive (c, in the /win98 example above) for
a pcfs logical drive. See mount_pcfs(1M) for syntax for pcfs logical drives and for pcfs-specific mount options.
Example 3: CacheFS Mount
Below is an example for a CacheFS file system. Because of the length of this entry and the fact that vfstab entries cannot be continued to
a second line, the vfstab fields are presented here in a vertical format. In re-creating such an entry in your own vfstab, you would enter
values as you would for any vfstab entry, on a single line.
device to mount: svr1:/export/abc
device to fsck: /usr/abc
mount point: /opt/cache
FS type: cachefs
fsck pass: 7
mount at boot: yes
mount options:
local-access,bg,nosuid,demandconst,backfstype=nfs,cachedir=/opt/cache
See mount_cachefs(1M) for CacheFS-specific mount options.
Example 4: Loopback File System Mount
The following is an example of mounting a loopback (lofs) file system:
/export/test - /opt/test lofs - yes -
See lofs(7FS) for an overview of the loopback file system.
SEE ALSO fsck(1M), mount(1M), mount_cachefs(1M), mount_hsfs(1M), mount_nfs(1M), mount_tmpfs(1M), mount_ufs(1M), swap(1M), getvfsent(3C)
System Administration Guide: Basic Administration
SunOS 5.10 21 Jun 2001 vfstab(4)