If you have installed sdd drivers instead of sddpcm then you will find the paths are also mentioned as hdisk. You can check which sdd drivers you have installed by
if the output is
"devices.sddpcm.53.rte" then all the hdisks are LUN's mapped to your server.
If the output is
"devices.sdd.53.rte" then the paths are also shown as hdisk. (Mine is AIX 5.3)
You can use "lsattr -El hdiskpower6" and look for the "active_hdisk" it will show all the paths connected to that disk. you can get an idea from the below output
& the output is
Hope this helps you.
Regards,
VJM
---------- Post updated at 01:59 PM ---------- Previous update was at 01:49 PM ----------
Hi,
Mine is ds8k storage. I think you have emc storage so check for the drivers it will help to conclude. From your output it seems hdiskpower0 to 21 are the Luns mapped and the hdisk2 to 47 are paths.
Regards,
VJM
Last edited by zaxxon; 12-15-2011 at 05:22 AM..
Reason: added some code tags to the outputs
ok, I am having a seriouse problem!
I can not wite in my landguidge, I live in sweden but I seem to have an american keyboard layout so I cant write some letters and all the key commands are all messed up. Does anyone know where I can find a swedisch keyboard layout? (3 Replies)
I try to solve the problem https://www.unix.com/showthread.php?p=86595 use stack hack method, I am puzzled the stack layout.
under vc6.0, the following code work(in release mode).
#include <stdio.h>
void change()
{
int x;
int j;
(&x) = 5; // if in debug mode, change to (&x) = 5;... (1 Reply)
Apologize if I hurt anyone's head with my questions, I'm entirely new to Unix and my office here doesn't offer any training just learn as you go. Anyways they asked me to get a disk layout of one of our servers and gave me this as an example the lables are assumptions
Disk ... (2 Replies)
I have a fixed width source file like this( it has 5 different record types identified by bolded numbers)
N5101ABCD 9820398 2983287
N5102 9s9923 00000000 00
N5103
N5101TTT 9843438 9494994
N5104 sdsd
N5101YYY 7777777 1111111
I need to have like this:
N5101ABCD ... (2 Replies)
Hi
I am unable to understand the disk layout of one of my disk attached to v240. This is newly installed system from jumpstart.
I am unable to see the free space on backup slice 2 and there are 0 to 8 slices listed when I run format and print the disk info, also there is no reference of... (9 Replies)
I am trying to build a veritas volume similar to an existing volume on another server. The output on source server is:
usbtor12# vxprint -hrtg appdg
v anvil_sqlVOL - ENABLED ACTIVE 629145600 SELECT - fsgen
pl anvil_sqlVOL-01 anvil_sqlVOL ENABLED ACTIVE 629145600... (3 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I've a sample output from a script with a header as shown below.
The formatting is a little bit out of alignment when it's sent out via email.
Sample output:
Label Date New Data #AB Removed #CD Net Change
Statistic 2012-06-03 21807 mb 206 ... (3 Replies)
I have a B.11.31 U ia64 system where I swremove the disk driver "SerialSCSI-00 B.11.31.1303 PCI-X/PCI-E SerialSCSI" (by mistake). afterwards the system won;t boot because of the missing disk drivers. I'm trying to recover my kernel by using the image HP-ux_11_31_disc_1.iso
Run an Expert... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have a EFI disk and it is use in zfs pool.
partition> p
Volume: rpool
Current partition table (original):
Total disk sectors available: 1172107117 + 16384 (reserved sectors)
Part Tag Flag First Sector Size Last Sector
0 usr wm ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: javanoob
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
partx
PARTX(8) System Administration PARTX(8)NAME
partx - tell the Linux kernel about the presence and numbering of on-disk partitions
SYNOPSIS
partx [-a|-d|-s] [-t TYPE] [-n M:N] [-] disk
partx [-a|-d|-s] [-t TYPE] partition [disk]
DESCRIPTION
Given a device or disk-image, partx tries to parse the partition table and list its contents. It optionally adds or removes partitions.
The disk argument is optional when a partition argument is provided. To force scanning a partition as if it were a whole disk (for example
to list nested subpartitions), use the argument "-". For example:
partx --show - /dev/sda3
This will see sda3 as a whole-disk rather than a partition.
This is not an fdisk program -- adding and removing partitions does not change the disk, it just tells the kernel about the presence and
numbering of on-disk partitions.
OPTIONS -a, --add
Add the specified partitions, or read the disk and add all partitions.
-b, --bytes
Print the SIZE column in bytes rather than in human-readable format.
-d, --delete
Delete the specified partitions or all partitions.
-g, --noheadings
Do not print a header line.
-l, --list
List the partitions. Note that all numbers are in 512-byte sectors. This output format is DEPRECATED in favour of --show. Don't
use it in newly written scripts.
-o, --output list
Define the output columns to use for --show and --raw output. If no output arrangement is specified, then a default set is used.
Use --help to get list of all supported columns.
-r, --raw
Use the raw output format.
-s, --show
List the partitions. All numbers (except SIZE) are in 512-byte sectors. The output columns can be rearranged with the --output
option.
-t, --type type
Specify the partition table type -- aix, bsd, dos, gpt, mac, minix, sgi, solaris_x86, sun, ultrix or unixware.
-n, --nr M:N
Specify the range of partitions. For backward compatibility also the format <M-N> is supported. The range may contain negative
numbers, for example "--nr :-1" means the last partition, and "--nr -2:-1" means the last two partitions. Supported range specifi-
cations are:
<M> Specifies just one partition (e.g. --nr 3).
<M:> Specifies lower limit only (e.g. --nr 2:).
<:N> Specifies upper limit only (e.g. --nr :4).
<M:N> or <M-N> Specifies lower and upper limits (e.g. --nr 2:4).
EXAMPLES
partx --show /dev/sdb3
partx --show --nr 3 /dev/sdb
partx --show /dev/sdb3 /dev/sdb
All three commands list partition 3 of /dev/sdb.
partx --show - /dev/sdb3
Lists all subpartitions on /dev/sdb3 (the device is used as whole-disk).
partx -o START -g --nr 3 /dev/sdb
Prints the start sector of partition 5 on /dev/sda without header.
partx -o SECTORS,SIZE /dev/sda5 /dev/sda
Lists the length in sectors and human-readable size of partition 5 on /dev/sda.
partx --add --nr 3:5 /dev/sdd
Adds all available partitions from 3 to 5 (inclusive) on /dev/sdd.
partx -d --nr :-1 /dev/sdd
Removes the last partition on /dev/sdd.
SEE ALSO addpart(8), delpart(8), fdisk(8), parted(8), partprobe(8)AUTHORS
Davidlohr Bueso <dave@gnu.org>
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
The original version was written by Andries E. Brouwer <aeb@cwi.nl>.
AVAILABILITY
The partx command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
util-linux February 2011 PARTX(8)