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Operating Systems Solaris aggr not persistent after a reboot Post 302586714 by christr on Tuesday 3rd of January 2012 05:14:22 AM
Old 01-03-2012
I would do it too if the hardware supported aggregation. After all, why not if the hardware can do it.

That sounds like a cool setup. I run everything inside my ESXi with 4 guests. Solaris 10, Ubuntu 11, CentOS 5, and a Windows VM. Solaris 10 acts as the router, DHCP server, firewall, etc... for the entire network. Ubuntu is my media and file server with two 600 GB disks for storage of video, family photos, music, documents, data, backups of home PCs, etc.... It has PS3 Media Server, qTorrent, Samba, NFS server, and MiniDLNA always running on it too. I have it rsync the data once a week for backup purposes. The CentOS just sits there running for when I feal like doing something in a Red Hat distro, and Windows runs a few tools like DynDNS and OpenDNS that don't have Unix versions of their tools. I also use the Windows VM for a few other things form time to time like being able to pull up a file on Dropbox remotely that I need a Windows PC for from my phone for stuff like Quicken, etc...

I plan to build a new home server sometime in 2012, as this current machine is now 4 years old and 600 gigs isn't cutting it anymore for storage. I'll probably do MicroATX with two 2 or 3 TB disks and setup ZFS mirrors on seperate vmdks on each physical disk, and then to the same with LVM for Linux VMs. Won't bother mirroring Windows, as who cares about Windows anyway.... Smilie. I'll probably wait to do Solaris 11 when I build the new machine. It's all so time consuming.
 

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FINDSMB(1)							   User Commands							FINDSMB(1)

NAME
findsmb - list info about machines that respond to SMB name queries on a subnet SYNOPSIS
findsmb [subnet broadcast address] DESCRIPTION
This perl script is part of the samba(7) suite. findsmb is a perl script that prints out several pieces of information about machines on a subnet that respond to SMB name query requests. It uses nmblookup(1) and smbclient(1) to obtain this information. OPTIONS
-r Controls whether findsmb takes bugs in Windows95 into account when trying to find a Netbios name registered of the remote machine. This option is disabled by default because it is specific to Windows 95 and Windows 95 machines only. If set, nmblookup(1) will be called with -B option. subnet broadcast address Without this option, findsmb will probe the subnet of the machine where findsmb(1) is run. This value is passed to nmblookup(1) as part of the -B option. EXAMPLES
The output of findsmb lists the following information for all machines that respond to the initial nmblookup for any name: IP address, NetBIOS name, Workgroup name, operating system, and SMB server version. There will be a '+' in front of the workgroup name for machines that are local master browsers for that workgroup. There will be an '*' in front of the workgroup name for machines that are the domain master browser for that workgroup. Machines that are running Windows for Workgroups, Windows 95 or Windows 98 will not show any information about the operating system or server version. The command with -r option must be run on a system without nmbd(8) running. If nmbd is running on the system, you will only get the IP address and the DNS name of the machine. To get proper responses from Windows 95 and Windows 98 machines, the command must be run as root and with -r option on a machine without nmbd running. For example, running findsmb without -r option set would yield output similar to the following IP ADDR NETBIOS NAME WORKGROUP/OS/VERSION --------------------------------------------------------------------- 192.168.35.10 MINESET-TEST1 [DMVENGR] 192.168.35.55 LINUXBOX *[MYGROUP] [Unix] [Samba 2.0.6] 192.168.35.56 HERBNT2 [HERB-NT] 192.168.35.63 GANDALF [MVENGR] [Unix] [Samba 2.0.5a for IRIX] 192.168.35.65 SAUNA [WORKGROUP] [Unix] [Samba 1.9.18p10] 192.168.35.71 FROGSTAR [ENGR] [Unix] [Samba 2.0.0 for IRIX] 192.168.35.78 HERBDHCP1 +[HERB] 192.168.35.88 SCNT2 +[MVENGR] [Windows NT 4.0] [NT LAN Manager 4.0] 192.168.35.93 FROGSTAR-PC [MVENGR] [Windows 5.0] [Windows 2000 LAN Manager] 192.168.35.97 HERBNT1 *[HERB-NT] [Windows NT 4.0] [NT LAN Manager 4.0] VERSION
This man page is correct for version 3 of the Samba suite. SEE ALSO
nmbd(8), smbclient(1), and nmblookup(1) AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed. The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open Source software, available at ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/) and updated for the Samba 2.0 release by Jeremy Allison. The conversion to DocBook for Samba 2.2 was done by Gerald Carter. The conversion to DocBook XML 4.2 for Samba 3.0 was done by Alexander Bokovoy. Samba 3.5 06/18/2010 FINDSMB(1)
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