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Full Discussion: Convert rootvg to scalable
Operating Systems AIX Convert rootvg to scalable Post 302930983 by zaxxon on Friday 9th of January 2015 07:33:37 AM
Old 01-09-2015
First off, I have never tried to convert the rootvg into a scalable.

Reasons:

Usually rootvg should be sufficient for it's parameters. If you have application data etc. on the rootvg, you might want to think about adding additional disks and form a new VG on them to simply separate the OS from your application data.
Normally you want your rootvg for a production system as clean as possible which means that only OS stuff resides there with the one or other small exception.

If you want to give it a try anyways, I would do the following:
  1. Take a mksysb backup including all relevant file systems (check that you don't have excludes listed that might relate into a problem on a possible restore)
  2. Break the mirror
  3. Boot in service mode
  4. varyoffvg rootvg and try to issue the chvg and convert it to scalable
 

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FONTTOSFNT(1)						      General Commands Manual						     FONTTOSFNT(1)

NAME
fonttosfnt - Wrap a bitmap font in a sfnt (TrueType) wrapper SYNOPSIS
fonttosfnt [ options ] -o file.ttf [ -- ] font... DESCRIPTION
Wrap a bitmap font or a set of bitmap fonts in a sfnt (TrueType or OpenType) wrapper. OPTIONS
-v Be verbose. -c Do not crop glyphs. This usually increases file size, but may sometimes yield a modest decrease in file size for small character cell fonts (terminal fonts). -b Write byte-aligned glyph data. By default, unaligned data is written, which yields a smaller file size. -r Do not reencode fonts. By default, fonts are reencoded to Unicode whenever possible. -g n Set the type of scalable glyphs that we write. If n is 0, no scalable glyphs are written; this is legal but confuses most current software. If n is 1, a single scalable glyph (the undefined glyph) is written; this is recommended, but triggers a bug in current versions of FreeType. If n is 2 (the default), a sufficiently high number of blank glyphs are written, which works with FreeType but increases file size. -m n Set the type of scalable metrics that we write. If n is 0, no scalable metrics are written, which may or may not be legal. If n is 1, full metrics for a single glyph are written, and only left sidebearing values are written for the other glyphs. If n is 2, scal- able metrics for all glyphs are written, which increases file size and is not recommended. The default is 1. -- End of options. BUGS
Some of the font-level values, notably sub- and superscript positions, are dummy values. SEE ALSO
X(7), Xserver(1), Xft(3x). Fonts in X11. AUTHOR
The version of Fonttosfnt included in this X.Org Foundation release was originally written by Juliusz Chroboczek <jch@freedesktop.org> for the XFree86 project. X Version 11 fonttosfnt 1.0.4 FONTTOSFNT(1)
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