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Full Discussion: Can't mount a partition
Operating Systems AIX Can't mount a partition Post 302925084 by bakunin on Thursday 13th of November 2014 11:00:41 PM
Old 11-14-2014
Quote:
Code:
root@omega /home/root >dd if=/dev/fslv06 of=/dev/null bs=1024k
dd: 0511-051 The read failed.

May i ask if there is any device at all? what does "lsvg -l" say?

And another thing: have you issued this command exactly as you have written:

Code:
lquerypv -h /dev/hdx 1000 100

??

Of course you need to lquerypv not a "/dev/hdx" but your device in question, "/dev/fslv06", yes?

One more thing: please present your data COMPLETELY, with any (diagnostic) output. "didn't work" is less than no information at all and since you - sitting in front of your screen and seeing everything - are not able to diagnose your problem correctly how are we supposed to do it with even less information than you have? "lquerypv" must have had some output, at least some diagnostic message. Post that instead of "didn't work" which can mean anything and then some.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
This User Gave Thanks to bakunin For This Post:
 

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device_maps(4)							   File Formats 						    device_maps(4)

NAME
device_maps - device_maps file SYNOPSIS
/etc/security/device_maps DESCRIPTION
The device_maps file contains access control information about each physical device. Each device is represented by a one line entry of the form: device-name : device-type : device-list : where device-name This is an arbitrary ASCII string naming the physical device. This field contains no embedded white space or non- printable characters. device-type This is an arbitrary ASCII string naming the generic device type. This field identifies and groups together devices of like type. This field contains no embedded white space or non-printable characters. device-list This is a list of the device special files associated with the physical device. This field contains valid device special file path names separated by white space. The device_maps file is an ASCII file that resides in the /etc/security directory. Lines in device_maps can end with a `' to continue an entry on the next line. Comments may also be included. A `#' makes a comment of all further text until the next NEWLINE not immediately preceded by a `'. Leading and trailing blanks are allowed in any of the fields. The device_maps file must be created by the system administrator before device allocation is enabled. This file is owned by root, with a group of sys, and a mode of 0644. EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample device_maps file # scsi tape st1: rmt: /dev/rst21 /dev/nrst21 /dev/rst5 /dev/nrst5 /dev/rst13 /dev/nrst13 /dev/rst29 /dev/nrst29 /dev/rmt/1l /dev/rmt/1m /dev/rmt/1 /dev/rmt/1h /dev/rmt/1u /dev/rmt/1ln /dev/rmt/1mn /dev/rmt/1n /dev/rmt/1hn /dev/rmt/1un /dev/rmt/1b /dev/rmt/1bn: FILES
/etc/security/device_maps SEE ALSO
allocate(1), bsmconv(1M), deallocate(1), dminfo(1M), list_devices(1) NOTES
The functionality described in this man page is available only if the Basic Security Module (BSM) has been enabled. See bsmconv(1M) for more information. SunOS 5.10 16 Jan 2001 device_maps(4)
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