Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Different sizes with getconf DISK_SIZE and lspv Post 302965796 by zaxxon on Wednesday 3rd of February 2016 07:41:29 AM
Old 02-03-2016
It could be that this is the reason - sadly there is no way for me to verify it because I have no root access and no VIOS access.
I assume they did the chvg -v on the VIOS but not on the client LPARs, maybe due to the needed varyon/off.

I will have to take the output of lspv in this case Smilie

Thanks though.

cheers
zaxxon
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Directory sizes

Can someone tell me how to read these damn sizes. i mean, i prefer to see sizes in MB but that is not the case when you do an ls -l on directories. i have a had time converting these to MB just for verification purposes, what would a directory size like this = 3499990308 represent in MB or... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: TRUEST
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

AIX p570 lspv, lslv etc... not working

Hi we are running a VIO server on a AIX p570 we cannot run and of the command the query the ODM has anyone seen this problem or has a solution the command just hangs. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: truma1
1 Replies

3. Solaris

invalid getconf output and Perl compile

I was compiling perl on a Solaris 10 server. The compile failed because the output of getconf is wrong (it indicates xarch is generic64 not v9. This is a known bug but I cannot find a fix. I wrote a script as suggested that changes it but when you run getconf again it goes back to generic64. ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: csross
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

getconf LONG_BIT and isainfo conflict

I wish to programmatically determine whether a solaris system is 32-bit or 64-bit. Investigation on the web suggested that the following commands were the right way to test this: # isainfo -kv # getconf LONG_BIT Strangely, on all three of the solaris systems I have access to, isainfo... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nosrednayduj
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk command for search a string in lspv

I want to know wich hdisk have only one pvid and also display hdisk with two pvid. hdisk1 00c3fcd4e516183f testvg active hdisk2 00c3fcd4e516189b testvg active hdisk3 00c3fcd4e51618ec testvg ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: khalidou13
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk command for search a string in lspv

I 've got this retourn when i tape the commande lspv: hdisk0 00c3fce454950416 rootvg active hdisk1 00c3fce454950416 rootvg active I want to verify if hdisk0 et hdisk1 have the same pvid (ex : 00c3fce454950416)? Can... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: khalidou13
8 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with file sizes

I have 2 big files in the size of gb. They are same with respect to content, both are “,” delimited. Now both of them are created by two different processes but has the same logic. The problem is they are differing only in few bytes for e.g one file is 202195751 bytes other is 202195773. So... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dsravan
2 Replies

8. AIX

Lspv -free command on VIOS

Hi all, When we run lpsv -free command on VIOS, it will take lot of time to display free disks i.e around 8 to 10 minutes. VIOS ioslevel is 2.2.1.4Can you have any solution for this problem? Many Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: m_raheelahmed
2 Replies

9. AIX

Lspv -free command on VIOS

Hi all, We have observed that lspv -free command tooks 15 to 20 minutes to display the free disks and we have only 77 MPIO disks on VIO Server. Our VIOS version is 2.2.1.4. Please let us know what could be the reason that lspv -free command taking long time to display the output. Thank (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: m_raheelahmed
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Partition Sizes

Good Morning, What's a good way to get partition/slice sizes down to the byte on Solaris 9? I've tried a few ways, but only see results like 8.21GB which rounds the number. Thanks! (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Stellaman1977
5 Replies
scalac(1)							   USER COMMANDS							 scalac(1)

NAME
scalac - Compiler for the Scala 2 language SYNOPSIS
scalac [ <options> ] <source files> PARAMETERS
<options> Command line options. See OPTIONS below. <source files> One or more source files to be compiled (such as MyClass.scala). OPTIONS
The compiler has a set of standard options that are supported on the current development environment and will be supported in future releases. An additional set of non-standard options are specific to the current virtual machine implementation and are subject to change in the future. Non-standard options begin with -X. Standard Options -g:{none,source,line,vars,notc} "none" generates no debugging info, "source" generates only the source file attribute, "line" generates source and line number information, "vars" generates source, line number and local variable information, "notc" generates all of the above and will not perform tail call optimization. -nowarn Generate no warnings -verbose Output messages about what the compiler is doing -deprecation Indicate whether source should be compiled with deprecation information; defaults to off (accepted values are: on, off, yes and no) Available since Scala version 2.2.1 -unchecked Enable detailed unchecked warnings Non variable type-arguments in type patterns are unchecked since they are eliminated by erasure Available since Scala version 2.3.0 -classpath <path> Specify where to find user class files (on Unix-based systems a colon-separated list of paths, on Windows-based systems, a semi- colon-separate list of paths). This does not override the built-in ("boot") search path. The default class path is the current directory. Setting the CLASSPATH variable or using the -classpath command-line option over- rides that default, so if you want to include the current directory in the search path, you must include "." in the new settings. -sourcepath <path> Specify where to find input source files. -bootclasspath <path> Override location of bootstrap class files (where to find the standard built-in classes, such as "scala.List"). -extdirs <dirs> Override location of installed extensions. -d <directory> Specify where to place generated class files. -encoding <encoding> Specify character encoding used by source files. The default value is platform-specific (Linux: "UTF8", Windows: "Cp1252"). Executing the following code in the Scala interpreter will return the default value on your system: scala> new java.io.InputStreamReader(System.in).getEncoding -target: <target> Specify which backend to use (jvm-1.5,msil). The default value is "jvm-1.5" (was "jvm-1.4" up to Scala version 2.6.1). -print Print program with all Scala-specific features removed -optimise Generates faster bytecode by applying optimisations to the program -explaintypes Explain type errors in more detail. -uniqid Print identifiers with unique names (debugging option). -version Print product version and exit. -help Print a synopsis of standard options. Advanced Options -Xassem <file> Name of the output assembly (only relevant with -target:msil) -Xassem-path <path> List of assemblies referenced by the program (only relevant with -target:msil) -Xcheck-null Emit warning on selection of nullable reference -Xdisable-assertions Generate no assertions and assumptions -Xexperimental enable experimental extensions -Xno-uescape Disable handling of u unicode escapes -Xplug-types Parse but ignore annotations in more locations -Xplugin: <file> Load a plugin from a file -Xplugin-disable: <plugin> Disable a plugin -Xplugin-list Print a synopsis of loaded plugins -Xplugin-opt: <plugin:opt> Pass an option to a plugin -Xplugin-require: <plugin> Abort unless a plugin is available -Xprint: <phases> Print out program after <phases> (see below). -Xprint-pos Print tree positions (as offsets) -Xprint-types Print tree types (debugging option). -Xprompt Display a prompt after each error (debugging option). -Xresident Compiler stays resident, files to compile are read from standard input. -Xshow-class <class> Show class info. -Xshow-object <object> Show object info. -Xshow-phases Print a synopsis of compiler phases. -Xsource-reader <classname> Specify a custom method for reading source files. -Xscript <object> Compile as a script, wrapping the code into object.main(). Compilation Phases initial initializing compiler parse parse source files namer create symbols analyze name and type analysis refcheck reference checking uncurry uncurry function types and applications lambdalift lambda lifter typesasvalues represent types as values addaccessors add accessors for constructor arguments explicitouterclasses make links from inner classes to enclosing one explicit addconstructors add explicit constructor for each class tailcall add tail-calls wholeprog perform whole program analysis addinterfaces add one interface per class expandmixins expand mixins by code copying boxing makes boxing explicit erasure type eraser icode generate icode codegen enable code generation terminal compilation terminated all matches all phases ENVIRONMENT
JAVACMD Specify the java command to be used for running the Scala code. Arguments may be specified as part of the environment variable; spaces, quotation marks, etc., will be passed directly to the shell for expansion. JAVA_HOME Specify JDK/JRE home directory. This directory is used to locate the java command unless JAVACMD variable set. JAVA_OPTS Specify the options to be passed to the java command defined by JAVACMD. With Java 1.5 (or newer) one may for example configure the memory usage of the JVM as follows: JAVA_OPTS="-Xmx512M -Xms16M -Xss16M" With GNU Java one may configure the memory usage of the GIJ as follows: JAVA_OPTS="--mx512m --ms16m" EXAMPLES
Compile a Scala program to the current directory scalac HelloWorld Compile a Scala program to the destination directory classes scalac -d classes HelloWorld.scala Compile a Scala program using a user-defined java command env JAVACMD=/usr/local/bin/cacao scalac -d classes HelloWorld.scala Compile all Scala files found in the source directory src to the destination directory classes scalac -d classes src/*.scala EXIT STATUS
scalac returns a zero exist status if it succeeds to compile the specified input files. Non zero is returned in case of failure. AUTHOR
Written by Martin Odersky and other members of the Scala team. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to http://lampsvn.epfl.ch/trac/scala. COPYRIGHT
This is open-source software, available to you under a BSD-like license. See accomponying "copyright" or "LICENSE" file for copying condi- tions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. SEE ALSO
fsc(1), sbaz(1), scala(1), scaladoc(1), scalap(1) version 0.4 April 18, 2007 scalac(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:48 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy