Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX AIX break rootvg mirror from system down Post 302942292 by rbatte1 on Monday 27th of April 2015 07:43:41 AM
Old 04-27-2015
I've never managed to span DVD media for a mksysb. How big was your rootvg? Did you have stuff other than just the base OS? (and perhaps your backup software)

I have restored a mirrored rootvg to a single disk, but that was planned in advance and we adjust the backup process.



Robin
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. HP-UX

Break mirror so that it can be used later

Hello again, We need to install patches to HP-UX B.11.11 but would like to break the mirror it has (with out damaging it) so that in case of failure we can use this a meassure procedure. Any ideas on how to do this Thank you! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: AQG
2 Replies

2. Solaris

patch update and break mirror

Hi All, How do you know if you need to break the mirror on solaris 8 patch update? Here's the patch example, 117350-54. On the site, it's just a low type update and not a medium or critical. Is breaking a mirror a best practice only or really a requirement to some patch? Thanks, itik (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: itik
1 Replies

3. Solaris

break solaris mirror

Hi All, How do I break the solaris 8 mirror? And how do I make sure I will point the first hd mirror on reboot. If the first break mirror won't boot. How do I make the copy mirror to boot? Thanks in advance, itik (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: itik
2 Replies

4. AIX

mirror rootvg

Hello I have a question I have a box with Aix 5.3 with rootvg on mirror. I deleted a filesystem and I create a new one to install some software but when I type lsvg -l rootvg all my filesystems has mirror unless the new one. My question is I can mirror this fs only ??? or I have to... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: lo-lp-kl
9 Replies

5. AIX

AIX 5.2/5.3 - rootvg on SAN disk - pros and cons

We are considering a DR strategy of booting AIX 5.3 and 5.3 logical partitions from EMC Symmetrix SAN disks, so that we can replicate via SRDF to a recovery site. Has anyone tried configuring AIX 5.x systems to boot from SAN disk? If so, can you provide any information on the pros and cons of... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jjgarrot
6 Replies

6. AIX

AIX Rootvg mirror and sysdumplv

Guys, In my AIX 6.1 box the rootvg was on hdisk2, I tried to migrated it to hdisk0 Added hisk0 to rootvg , mirrored rootvg and changed bootlist and and sucessfully rebooted from hdisk0 Now I tried to remove the hdisk2 from rootvg so breaked mirror -bash-3.00# unmirrorvg rootvg hdisk2... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kkeng808
3 Replies

7. AIX

Erase AIX rootvg system disk

Hello all, I need help for erasing IBM P5 machine running AIX 5.3. I have 2 system disks (Hardware mirror) and i'm looking for a way like a LIVE CD bootable CD so I can boot with the cd and then format the system disks with a "secure erase" software. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: kobi gabai
7 Replies

8. Solaris

Solaris Volume Manager: Break Mirror and use to make a 2nd machine

Hello: I have a machine built on 2 drives and mirrors have been created to a second set of 2 drives (4 total) on the same platform. SVM. Might anyone provide guidance to create a second machine by breaking the mirrored set, moving the two mirrors (2) to another machine (same platform type),... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: 4dailyrunner
1 Replies

9. AIX

How to restore rootvg archive after AIX 6.1 crash

Hello, Few days ago I created both mksysb and savevg archives of rootvg. How can I restore this rootvg now because the AIX crashed during some software tests. There is no way to start from hdisk0 because most of the system files are deleted (this includes libc.a). I tough it will be trivial... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: +Yan
6 Replies

10. Linux

LVM - break mirror taking out orignal copy

Hi Guys, I have a mirrored LVM volume, and wish to break the mirror leaving only copy1 (effectively removing copy 0). Here's the config: # lvs -a -o +devices lvdata vg01 mwi-ao 2.19T lvdata_mlog 100.00 lvdata_mimage_0(0),lvdata_mimage_1(0) vg01... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: badoshi
0 Replies
dvdbackup(1)						      General Commands Manual						      dvdbackup(1)

NAME
dvdbackup - Tool to backup DVDs SYNOPSIS
dvdbackup [OPTION]... DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the dvdbackup command. This manual page was written for the Debian distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. dvdbackup is a tool to extract data from video DVDs. It has the advantages of being small, fast, and easy to use. OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. -h, --help print a brief usage message -V, --version print version information -I, --info for information about the DVD -M, --mirror backup the whole DVD -F, --feature backup the main feature of the DVD -T X, --titleset=X backup title set X -t X, --title=X backup title X -s X, --start=X backup from chapter X -e X, --end=X backup to chapter X -i DEVICE, --input=DEVICE where DEVICE is your DVD device. This switch only needs to be used if your DVD device node is not /dev/dvd -o DIRECTORY, --output=DIRECTORY where DIRECTORY is your backup target. If not given, the current working directory will be used. -v, --verbose print more information about progress -n NAME, --name=NAME (optional) set the title - useful if autodetection fails -a 0, --aspect=0 to get aspect ratio 4:3 instead of 16:9 if both are present -r {a,b,m}, --error={a,b,m} select read error handling: a=abort, b=skip block, m=skip multiple blocks (default) -p, --progress print progress information while copying VOBs Option notes -a is option to the -F switch and has no effect on other options -s and -e should preferably be used together with -t General backup information If your backup directory is /my/dvd/backup/dir/ specified with the -o flag, then dvdbackup will create a DVD-Video structure under /my/dvd/backup/dir/TITLE_NAME/VIDEO_TS. If the -o flag is omitted, the current directory is used. Since the title is "unique" you can use the same directory for all your DVD backups. If it happens to have a generic title dvdbackup will exit with a return value of 2, and you will need to specify a title name with the -n switch. dvdbackup will always mimic the original DVD-Video structure. Hence if you e.g. use the -M (mirror) you will get an exact duplicate of the original. This means that every file will have the same size as the original one. Likewise also for the -F and the -T switch. However the -t and (-t -s/-e) switch is a bit different the titles sectors will be written to the original file but not at the same offset as the original one since there may be gaps in the cell structure that we do not fill. EXAMPLES
dvdbackup -I gathers information about the DVD. /dev/dvd is the default device tried - you need to use -i if your device name is different. dvdbackup -M backups the whole DVD. This action creates a valid DVD-Video structure that can be burned to a DVD-/+R(W) with help of genisoimage. dvdbackup -F backups the main feature of the DVD. This action creates a valid DVD-Video structure of the feature title set. Note that this will not result in an image immediately watchable - you will need another program like dvdauthor to help construct the IFO files. dvdbackup defaults to get the 16:9 version of the main feature if a 4:3 is also present on the DVD. To get the 4:3 version use -a 0. dvdbackup makes it best to make a intelligent guess what is the main feature of the DVD - in case it fails please send a bug report. dvdbackup -T 2 backups the title set 2 i.e. all VTS_02_X.XXX files. This action creates a valid DVD-Video structure of the specified title set. Note that this will not result in an image immediately watchable - you will need another program like dvdauthor to help construct the IFO files. dvdbackup -t 1 backups the title 1. This action backups all cells that forms the specified title. Note that there can be sector gaps in between one cell and another. dvdbackup will backup all sectors that belongs to the title but will skip sectors that are not a part of the title. dvdbackup -t 1 -s 20 -e 25 This action will backup chapter 20 to 25 in title 1, as with the backup of a title there can be sector gaps between one chapter (cell) and on other. dvdbackup will backup all sectors that belongs to the title 1 chapter 20 to 25 but will skip sectors that are not a part of the title 1 chapter 20 to 25. To backup a single chapter e.g. chapter 20 do -s 20 -e 20. To backup from chapter 20 to the end chapter use only -s 20. To backup to chapter 20 from the first chapter use only -e 20. You can skip the -t switch and let the program guess the title although it is not recommended. If you specify a chapter that is higher than the last chapter of the title dvdbackup will truncate to the highest chapter of the title. EXIT STATUS
0 on success 1 on usage error 2 on title name error -1 on failure AUTHORS
dvdbackup was written by Olaf Beck <olaf_sc@yahoo.com>, but is now maintained by Benjamin Drung <benjamin.drung@gmail.com> and Stephen Gran <sgran@debian.org>. This manual page was written by Stephen Gran <sgran@debian.org>. 0.2 2008-03-18 dvdbackup(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:26 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy