Hi there
I am about to mirror a Solaris 10 x86 box (SunFire X4100) onto a secondary disk using svm (current system is one disk). My question is this, on X86 boxes there is a slice 8 defined as boot partition (and also a slice 9, dunno what its used for tho). Do I need to mirror this boot slice... (0 Replies)
Is it possible to create a Mirror with zfs ??
I'm experimented user with Solstice Disk suite.
Or Sun Volume manager or veritas volume manager.
But, i would like switch from Disksuite to Zfs.
All my mirrored disks. (1 Reply)
Hi,
Recently I faced with need of analyze root disk. I figured out two possible ways to do it:
1. Practical. Boot from CD and run format
2. Theoretical. Create live upgrade boot environment on another disk, activate it, reboot, unmont all root disk partitions and run format.
I've already... (3 Replies)
I am a new Unix Sys Admin who is learning mostly from books with minimal classroom training (ie: no certificates, training is largely hands-on, conducted at work). I work with Solaris 8 through 10, and with some fairly outdated hardware. In my work restoring old workstations I have been instructed... (2 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I am trying to make a script to assign all diskspace to slice 0, on multiple sized disks. Since the disks are new they may need to be labelled also to avoid the error: Cannot get disk geometry
Below is my code struggling with logic which doesn't seem to be producing the desired... (0 Replies)
Hi there,
I am trying to do root volume mirroring on SunFire V210 server. I have two disks in it.First one is c1t0do and second one is c1t1do. Both disks already have partitions in them so I am deleting the partitions of second disk(c1t1do) using format command and selecting cylinder start 0... (2 Replies)
we have a ZFS file system that was created as a pool of just one disk (raid on a SAN) when this was created it was done as a whole disk, and so EFI label.
now we want to mount this file system into an LDOM.
my understanding of how ldom's and disk works this is that we can only do this as a... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am using SPARC Solaris 11.1 with EFI labelled disks.
I am new to ZFS file systems and slightly stuck when trying to create a partition (slice) on one of my LUNs.
EFI labels use sectors and blocks and I am not sure how exactly it works.
From here I can try and create a... (2 Replies)
I have a 240GB disk as rpool. I have installed Solaris 11.3 to a partition which is 110GB. Now I have another 130GB which is unallocated. I want to use that additional space as a temporary folder to be shared between Solaris and Linux. The additional space had no /dev/dsk/c2t4... entry so I used... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: kebabbert
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
systemd.slice
SYSTEMD.SLICE(5) systemd.slice SYSTEMD.SLICE(5)NAME
systemd.slice - Slice unit configuration
SYNOPSIS
slice.slice
DESCRIPTION
A unit configuration file whose name ends in ".slice" encodes information about a slice which is a concept for hierarchially managing
resources of a group of processes. This management is performed by creating a node in the Linux Control Group (cgroup) tree. Units that
manage processes (primarilly scope and service units) may be assigned to a specific slice. For each slice, certain resource limits may the
be set that apply to all processes of all units contained in that slice. Slices are organized hierarchially in a tree. The name of the
slice encodes the location in the tree. The name consists of a dash-separated series of names, which describes the path to the slice from
the root slice. The root slice is named, -.slice. Example: foo-bar.slice is a slice that is located within foo.slice, which in turn is
located in the root slice -.slice.
By default, service and scope units are placed in system.slice, virtual machines and containers registered with systemd-machined(1) are
found in machine.slice, and user sessions handled by systemd-logind(1) in user.slice. See systemd.special(5) for more information.
See systemd.unit(5) for the common options of all unit configuration files. The common configuration items are configured in the generic
[Unit] and [Install] sections. The slice specific configuration options are configured in the [Slice] section. Currently, only generic
resource control settings as described in systemd.resource-control(7) are allowed.
Unless DefaultDependencies=false is used, slice units will implicitly have dependencies of type Conflicts= and Before= on shutdown.target.
These ensure that slice units are removed prior to system shutdown. Only slice units involved with early boot or late system shutdown
should disable this option.
SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemd.unit(5), systemd.resource-control(5), systemd.service(5), systemd.scope(5), systemd.special(7), systemd.directives(7)systemd 208SYSTEMD.SLICE(5)