These were part of an ISMP install package, and when I try to remove them using geninstall I get:
Code:
ew7qo7u@essutl01:/home/ew7qo7u> sudo geninstall -Zu J:mqsi61.cfgmgrc
Password:
You have requested to uninstall an ISMP feature or component.
Uninstalling ISMP components is not allowed.
To uninstall an ISMP feature, you must run the uninstaller in interactive mode.
The uninstaller for this product can be found at
/opt/IBM/mqsi/6.1/_uninst_runtime/uninstall.jar.
But someone already deleted the /opt/IBM/mqsi directories.
So I need to know how to remove these filesets and ensure the ODM is clean afterward.
Say I am in /var/adm/bin and I want to search through all the various scripts and such in that directory for a string, say, xxx@yyy.com
I want to find every file with that in there and replace it with a single space.
Is that possible?
Or, is it possible to search every file and get a list... (7 Replies)
Hi,
How to recursively remove Ctrl M characters in files from a directory and its sub directory ?
I know unix2dos command is there but to remove in bunch of files ... ?
Thanks (7 Replies)
Hi,
I need to remove files (*.trc) which are older than 30 days from one location.
My problem is there I do not want to visit any of the directories at that location. I want to search files at that particular location only (need to skip directorys at that location). maxdepth option is there... (6 Replies)
Please provide me a shell script so that i can list which file or directory has been deleted, by which user and at what time. The script should take date as argument and should list out name of the file/directory, which user had deleted them and at what time since that particular date. Kindly post. (1 Reply)
I have a large list of filenames from an Excel sheet, which I then translate into a simple text file. I'd like to use this list, which contains various file extensions , to archive these files and then remove them recursively through multiple directories and subdirectories. So far, it looks like... (5 Replies)
Hi,
Physical volume of vg was removed permanently by acident. What I need right now is to remove all vg's objects(vg itself, vg's lvs, vg's filesystems) to prepare to add new pv and create new volume group and it's objects.
This is from reducevg manual:
"Sometimes a disk is removed from the... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Good day to everyone.
This is my first time joining the community and wanted to say thanks in advance for all your help and assistance. First, I am not expert in AIX and UNIX but I do know a thing or two and I have a simple question regarding ISMP.
We are using AIX 5.3 and a couple... (0 Replies)
Can anyone come up with a unix command that lists
all the files, directories and sub-directories in the current directory
except a folder called log.?
Thank you in advance. (7 Replies)
I am trying to remove files from a couple of directories after a process completes. Below is what I have so far, but the command does not run and cygwin closes too fast to read the error. Also, is it possible to have the printf be displayed until the files are removed then printf in italics is... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
rmfdmn
rmfdmn(8) System Manager's Manual rmfdmn(8)NAME
rmfdmn - removes a file domain
SYNOPSIS
/sbin/rmfdmn [-f] domain
OPTIONS
Turns off the message prompt.
OPERANDS
Specifies the name of an existing file domain.
DESCRIPTION
Use the rmfdmn utility to remove an existing, but unused, file domain and all its filesets from the system.
When you remove a file domain: The file domain and its filesets are destroyed The directory entry for the file domain in the /etc/fdmns
file is deleted AdvFS volumes which were assigned to the file domain are relabeled as unused
Before attempting to remove a file domain, unmount all filesets and clone filesets from the domain using the umount command. If you
attempt to remove a file domain that has mounted filesets or clone filesets, the system does not remove the file domain. Instead, it dis-
plays an error message indicating that a fileset is mounted.
For each file domain you attempt to remove, a prompt similar to the following is displayed: rmfdmn accounts_dmn rmfdmn: remove domain
accounts_dmn? [yes/no]
If you answer n, the file domain remains. If you answer y, it is removed. The default is n, the file domain remains.
The -f option is useful for scripts when you do not want to be queried for each file domain. If you choose the -f option, no message prompt
is displayed. The rmfdmn command operates as if you responded yes to the prompt.
RESTRICTIONS
You must be the root user to use this command.
To remove a domain, all filesets and clone filesets must be unmounted.
The rmfdmn command can leave a partially-removed domain in the /etc/fdmns directory, for example, should there be a system failure during
the remove operation. If this happens, the remnants of the removed domain are put in the /etc/fdmns directory as a file with a name in
this format: rmfdmn.domain_name.processid. If you interrupt the rmfdmn command or there is a system failure during its operation, check
the /etc/fdmns directory for domain names in this format and use the rmfdmn command to delete them.
However, if a partially-removed domain has been in the /etc/fdmns directory for some time, it can be risky to remove it with the rmfdmn
command: the partitions might have been put back into use and deleting them would make them unusable. [The rmfdmn command puts an unused
option in the fstype field of the disk label when it removes disks.]
In this case, use the rm -r command to remove the partially-recovered domain. Unlike the rmfdmn command, the rm command does not alter the
fstype field of the disk label.
EXAMPLES
The following example removes the accounts_dmn file domain. In this example, the accounts_dmn#credit_fs fileset is mounted on the /mnt3
directory and must be unmounted. When the verification prompt for removing the accounts_dmn is displayed, yes is selected. # umount /mnt3
# rmfdmn accounts_dmn # rmfdmn: remove domain accounts_dmn? [yes/no] # rmfdmn: domain accounts_dmn removed
FILES
Contains file domain names and devices.
SEE ALSO mkfdmn(8), advfs(4), showfdmn(8), mount(8)rmfdmn(8)