hi i have created a pool using zpool command for my /dev/dsk/c1d0s3 disk.
The poolname is qwertyuiopasdfghjklmnbvcxzzxcvbnmasdfghjklqwertyuiopoiuytrewqasdfghjklkjhgfdsazxcvbnmmnbnbcxczxzassd
ddddvfhfghgjjgjhgkhkljfjlhohihiuyuioyguioyguiowyuiogwyuigwrigywuigyguiyuiogyugiyguioyuyguiowygiuygui... (1 Reply)
hi ...
i have added a physical disk to the pool with
""zpool add <poolname> diskname"""... after that i realized that i have to mirror it instead..then i tried to take that disk out of the pool but i m not able to do that..
i have gone through many unix help sites , nothing worked ,
so please... (6 Replies)
I've been through many threads before i decide to create a separate thread.
I can't really find the solution to my (simple) problem.
Here's what I'm trying to achieve:
As "canar" user I want to run a command, let's say "/opt/ocaml/bin/ocaml" as "duck" user.
The only to achieve this is to... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have an X86pc with Solaris 10 and ZFS system. It has 8 similar disks.
I need help in creating some zpools and changing the mount-point of a slice.
Currently, the zpool in my system is like this:
root@abcxxx>zpool status
pool: rpool
state: ONLINE
scrub: none requested... (4 Replies)
Hello,
Does anyone know how I can tell what disk are being not being used by a zpool?
For example in Veritas Volume manager, I can run a "vxdisk list" and disks that are marked as "online invalid" are disk that are not used.
I'm looking for a similar command in ZFS which will easily show... (5 Replies)
Hello experts,
I have a solaris 10 (SunOS 5.10 Generic_148888-05 sun4u sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise) that by mistake I added a second san space of 700g to the pool. the whole pool is now 1.2T and, I need to take the space away from the pool and, make the pool 700g total. this is live oracle... (7 Replies)
Dear all,
recently, I migrated a solaris zone from one host to another. The zone was inside of a zpool. The zpool cotains two volumes.
I did the following:
host1:
$ zlogin zone1 shutdown -y -g0 -i0 #Zone status changes from running to installed
$ zpool export zone1
host2:
$ zpool... (2 Replies)
A backup/clone script of ours was recently ran. It normally only clones the rpool and renames in rpoolA. Something must've changed as it found another one of our pools that it shouldn't have. It exported that pool unbeknownst to us. Later on when a coworker realized the other pool was missing he... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have a problem with size on zfs filesystem on FreeBSD 9.2-RELEASE-p3.
When I do this:
free01# df -Th
Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ufs/FreeNASdde ufs 926M 826M 26M 97% /
devfs devfs ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: primo102
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
profiles
profiles(1)profiles(1)NAME
profiles - print execution profiles for a user
SYNOPSIS
profiles [-l] [ user ...]
The profiles command prints on standard output the names of the execution profiles that have been assigned to you or to the optionally-
specified user or role name. Profiles are a bundling mechanism used to enumerate the commands and authorizations needed to perform a spe-
cific function. Along with each listed executable are the process attributes, such as the effective user and group IDs, with which the
process runs when started by a privileged command interpreter. The profile shells are pfcsh, pfksh, and pfexec. See the pfexec(1) man page.
Profiles can contain other profiles defined in prof_attr(4).
Multiple profiles can be combined to construct the appropriate access control. When profiles are assigned, the authorizations are added to
the existing set. If the same command appears in multiple profiles, the first occurrence, as determined by the ordering of the profiles, is
used for process-attribute settings. For convenience, a wild card can be specified to match all commands.
When profiles are interpreted, the profile list is loaded from user_attr(4). If any default profile is defined in /etc/security/policy.conf
(see policy.conf(4)), the list of default profiles are added to the list loaded from user_attr(4). Matching entries in prof_attr(4) provide
the authorizations list, and matching entries in exec_attr(4) provide the commands list.
The following options are supported:
-l Lists the commands in each profile followed by the special process attributes such as user and group IDs.
Example 1: Sample Output
The output of the profiles command has the following form:
example% profiles tester01 tester02
tester01 : Audit Management, All Commands
tester02 : Device Management, All Commands
example%
Example 2: Using the list Option
example% profiles -l tester01 tester02
tester01 :
Audit Management:
/usr/sbin/audit euid=root
/usr/sbin/auditconfig euid=root egid=sys
All Commands:
*
tester02 :
Device Management:
/usr/bin/allocate: euid=root
/usr/bin/deallocate: euid=root
All Commands
*
example%
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
1 An error occurred.
/etc/security/exec_attr
/etc/security/prof_attr
/etc/user_attr
/etc/security/policy.conf
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
auths(1), pfexec(1), roles(1), getprofattr(3SECDB), exec_attr(4), policy.conf(4), prof_attr(4), user_attr(4), attributes(5)
11 Feb 2000 profiles(1)