Hi, I'm going to be involved in a migration of SAN islands to one big SAN. I've not worked with SANs before and I'm not sure how to approach this. I suspect the disk devices on the HP servers are going to change, when the EVA's and servers are plugged into this new Cisco 9509 switch.
Any... (0 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I wonder if I can canvas any opinions or thoughts (good or bad) on SAN attaching a SUN V880/490 to an EMC Clarion SAN?
At the moment the 880 is using 12 internal FC-AL disks as a db server and seems to be doing a pretty good job. It is not I/O, CPU or Memory constrained and the... (2 Replies)
hi all
just installed the netsec.options.tcpwrapper from expansion pack, which used to be a rpm, for my aix 6.1 test box.
it is so unpredictable. i set up the hosts.deny as suggested for all and allow the sshd for specific ip addresses/hostnames.
the tcpdchk says the hosts allowed and... (0 Replies)
I am going to do a SAN Array migration and need the sequence of steps required on the Solaris cluster before moving the old array luns to new array luns.
Here are the steps and I need info on the bold points:( I might even be wrong on the sequence of steps please correct me if I am wrong)
1.... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
We are migrating our SAN storage from HSV360 to 3PAR. The system runs aix 6.1 version with HACMP.
Please let me know what are requirements from OS side and how are the data copied to the new disks. (10 Replies)
Hi,
I am very new to HP-UX, and we're going to be doing a SAN migration.
We're going to take down the machine, and zone it to the new SAN.
My question is, will the device names change and will that interfere with the LVM?
If the new disks come in with different device names, how would I... (3 Replies)
I have an IBM blade running RHEL 5.4 server, connected to two Hitachi SANs using common fibre cards & Brocade switches. It has two volume groups made from old SAN LUNs. The old SAN needs to be retired so we allocated LUNs from the new SAN, discovered the LUNs as multipath disks (4 paths) and grew... (4 Replies)
I'm New to AIX / VIOS
We're doing a FC switch cutover on an ibm device, connected via SAN.
How do I tell if one path to my remote disk is lost? (aix lvm)
How do I tell when my link is down on my HBA port?
Appreciate your help, very much! (4 Replies)
I am working on VM host and collecting data to identify the type of storage attached to the server which will be migrated to VNX.
it has one ldom created on it
luxadm probe output ---
No Network Array enclosures found in /dev/es
Found Fibre Channel device(s):
Node... (7 Replies)
Am trying to copy a tar file onto a series of remote hosts and untar it at the destination. Need to do this without having to do multiple ssh.
Actions to perform within a single ssh session via shell script
- copy a file
- untar at destination (remote host)
OS : Linux RHEL6 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sankasu
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
umount
UMOUNT(8) BSD System Manager's Manual UMOUNT(8)NAME
umount -- unmount filesystems
SYNOPSIS
umount [-fv] special | node
umount -a | -A [-fv] [-h host] [-t type]
DESCRIPTION
The umount command calls the unmount(2) system call to remove a special device or the remote node (rhost:path) from the filesystem tree at
the point node. If either special or node are not provided, the appropriate information is taken from the list of filesystems provided by
getfsent(3).
The options are as follows:
-a All the filesystems described via getfsent(3) are unmounted.
-A All the currently mounted filesystems except the root are unmounted.
-f The filesystem is forcibly unmounted. Active special devices continue to work, but all other files return errors if further accesses
are attempted. The root filesystem cannot be forcibly unmounted.
-h host
Only filesystems mounted from the specified host will be unmounted. This option implies the -A option and, unless otherwise speci-
fied with the -t option, will only unmount NFS filesystems.
-t type
Is used to indicate the actions should only be taken on filesystems of the specified type. More than one type may be specified in a
comma separated list. The list of filesystem types can be prefixed with ``no'' to specify the filesystem types for which action
should not be taken. For example, the umount command:
umount -a -t nfs,hfs
umounts all filesystems of the type NFS and HFS.
-v Verbose, additional information is printed out as each filesystem is unmounted.
NOTES
Due to the complex and interwoven nature of Mac OS X, umount may fail often. It is recommended that diskutil(1) (as in, ``diskutil unmount
/mnt'') be used instead.
SEE ALSO unmount(2), getfsent(3), mount(8), diskutil(1)HISTORY
A umount command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.
4th Berkeley Distribution May 8, 1995 4th Berkeley Distribution