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Operating Systems HP-UX Recovering files from unbootable disk in HPUX 9 Post 302597555 by vbe on Friday 10th of February 2012 03:43:10 PM
Old 02-10-2012
An HP 715/100 in HP-UX9.XX would likely be a 9.05 (I did see some 9.07 but only at HP...) no lvm... it had something the series 800 did not have (9.04): a utility to generate a bootable tape... but serie 800 9.04 had LVM...
I suppose that if you are only trying to recover sensible data from the disk, forget about booting from it, try to connect as a second disk after creating a mount point, try to mount it and recover your files; then if it is the same disk as the station where you mounted it, you could after having saved all important configuration files and soft... do a dd to clone the disk and put it back in the original 715 then restore the correct configuration - all in single use mode...

Do you know why it is not booting? I did see one not being able because of 2-3 crashes the same day filling /tmp and / to 100%...
The solution was booting single user (or almost...) and use an option of fsck ( forgot what but it is for no sync ) by removing bad files rather than let them go in lost+found and try to reboot in a also no sync mode. Then once it reboots, trying to find out what you lost...
Good luck
Unfortunately Im on vacation next week, because I may have had some documentation in my draws at work...

Last edited by vbe; 02-10-2012 at 04:54 PM..
 

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REBOOT(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 REBOOT(8)

NAME
reboot - stopping and restarting the system SYNOPSIS
/sbin/reboot [ -lqnhdarsfRD ] /sbin/halt [ -lqndars ] /sbin/fastboot [ -lqndarsRD ] DESCRIPTION
2.11BSD is started by placing it in memory at location zero and transferring to its entry point. Since the system is not reentrant, it is necessary to read it in from disk or tape each time it is to be boot strapped. Rebooting a running system: When the system is running and a reboot is desired, shutdown(8) is normally used to stop time sharing and put the system into single user mode. If there are no users then /sbin/reboot can be used without shutting the system down first. Reboot normally causes the disks to be synced and allows the system to perform other shutdown activities such as resynchronizing hardware time-of-day clocks. A multi-user reboot (as described below) is then initiated. This causes a system to be booted and an automatic disk check to be performed. If all this succeeds without incident, the system is then brought up for multi-user operation. Options to reboot are: -l Don't try to tell syslogd(8) what's about to happen. -q Reboot quickly and ungracefully, without shutting down running processes first. -n Don't sync before rebooting. This can be used if a disk or the processor is on fire. -h Don't reboot, simply halt the processor. -d Dump memory onto the dump device, usually part of swap, before rebooting. The dump is done in the same way as after a panic. -a Have the system booter ask for the name of the system to be booted, rather than immediately booting the default system (/unix). -r Mount the root file system as read only when the system reboots. This is not supported by the kernel in 2.11BSD. -s Don't enter multi-user mode after system has rebooted - stay in single user mode. -f Fast reboot. Omit the automatic file system consistency check when the system reboots and goes multi-user. This is accomplished by passing a fast reboot flag on to the rebooting kernel. This currently prevents the use of -f flag in conjunction with the -h (halt) flag. -D Set the autoconfig(8) debug flag. This is normally not used unless one is debugging the autoconfig program. -R Tells the kernel to use the compiled in root device. Normally the system uses the device from which it was booted as the root/swap/pipe/dump device. Reboot normally places a shutdown record in the login accounting file /usr/adm/wtmp. This is inhibited if the -q or -n options are present. Note that the -f (fast reboot) and -n (don't sync) options are contradictory; the request for a fast reboot is ignored in this case. Halt and fastboot are synonymous with ``reboot -h'' and ``reboot -f'', respectively. Power fail and crash recovery: Normally, the system will reboot itself at power-up or after crashes if the contents of low memory are intact. An automatic consistency check of the file systems will be performed, and unless this fails, the system will resume multi-user operations. SEE ALSO
autoconfig(8), sync(2), utmp(8), shutdown(8), syslogd(8) 3rd Berkeley Distribution May 24, 1996 REBOOT(8)
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