Hi there
I am about to mirror a Solaris 10 x86 box (SunFire X4100) onto a secondary disk using svm (current system is one disk). My question is this, on X86 boxes there is a slice 8 defined as boot partition (and also a slice 9, dunno what its used for tho). Do I need to mirror this boot slice... (0 Replies)
Hello,
If I boot up from install media in single user mode (Solaris 9 - if it matters), will I be able to mount a concatenated volume? I have combined several disks into one non-os filesystem and I want to be able to mount it while booted in single user mode from cdrom. i.e., mount... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to unix. I am working on Red Hat Linux and side by side on AIX also. After reading the concepts of Storage, I am now really confused regarding the terminologies
1)Physical Volume
2)Volume Group
3)Logical Volume
4)Physical Partition
Please help me to understand these concepts. (6 Replies)
I like to increase swap size for my current server running solaris 10.
Seems like the system is not using it's full 16G of physical memory.
#swap -l
swapfile dev swaplo blocks free
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s1 32,1 16 1058288 1058288
# swap -s
total: 4125120k bytes... (17 Replies)
We have a 2 node cluster in which only the primary actually mounts the shared VGs at any specific time. We recently added a volume group to the primary.
* The disks in it are visible to both nodes, but the secondary does not know about the new VG.
* The new VG is not a "shared volume group"
*... (10 Replies)
Hello Guys,
I want to create a file system dedicated for an application installation. But there is no space in volume group to create a new logical volume. There is enough space in other logical volume which is being mounted on /var.
I know we can use that logical volume and create a virtual... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I added a new disk slice to the current metadb.
Below is what I see
bash-3.2# metadb -i
flags first blk block count
a m p luo 16 8192 /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s7
a p luo 8208 8192 ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: javanoob
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
pvremove
PVREMOVE(8) System Manager's Manual PVREMOVE(8)NAME
pvremove - remove a physical volume
SYNOPSIS
pvremove [-d|--debug] [-h|--help] [-t|--test] [-v|--verbose] [--version] [-f[f]|--force [--force]] [-y|--yes] PhysicalVolume [PhysicalVol-
ume...]
DESCRIPTION
pvremove wipes the label on a device so that LVM will no longer recognise it as a physical volume.
OPTIONS
See lvm(8) for common options.
-ff, --force --force
Force the removal of a physical volume belonging to an existing volume group. Normally vgreduce(8) should be used instead of this
command. You cannot remove a physical volume which in use by some active logical volume.
-y, --yes
Answer yes to all questions.
SEE ALSO lvm(8), pvcreate(8), pvdisplay(8), vgreduce(8)Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.95(2) (2012-03-06) PVREMOVE(8)