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Operating Systems Solaris Migrate /export/home from storage path to local Post 302988099 by Deeo on Tuesday 20th of December 2016 11:08:02 AM
Old 12-20-2016
OS is solaris 10 and machine type m9000 domain. The destination is the same server as current path just i need to transfer the path from from storge lun into local disk
 

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YPPUSH(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 YPPUSH(8)

NAME
yppush -- force propagation of updated NIS databases SYNOPSIS
yppush [-d domain] [-t timeout] [-j #parallel jobs] [-h host] [-p path] [-v] mapname DESCRIPTION
The yppush utility distributes updated NIS databases (or maps) from an NIS master server to NIS slave servers within an NIS domain. It is normally only run on the NIS master by /var/yp/Makefile whenever any of the NIS maps are updated. Note that /var/yp/Makefile does not invoke yppush by default: the ``NOPUSH=True'' entry in the Makefile must first be commented out (the default FreeBSD configuration assumes a small network with only a single NIS server; in such a configuration, yppush is not needed). By default, yppush determines the names of the slave servers for a domain by searching the ypservers map. A destination host (or a list of hosts) can also be manually specified on the command line. Once it has a complete list of slave servers, it sends a 'map transfer' request to each slave, which in turn reads a copy of the map from the master NIS server using ypxfr(8). Included within each request is the name of the map to be copied and some special information required by ypxfr(8) to successfully 'callback' to yppush and carry out the transfer. Any error messages yppush receives from ypxfr(8) via callback will be printed to stderr. The following options are available: -d domain Specify a particular domain. The NIS domain of the local host system is used by default. If the local host's domain name is not set, the domain name must be specified with this flag. -t timeout Specify a timeout value in seconds. This timeout controls how long yppush will wait for a response from a slave server before send- ing a map transfer request to the next slave server in its list. -j #parallel jobs The yppush utility normally performs transfers serially, meaning that it will send a map transfer request to one slave server and then wait for it to respond before moving on to the next slave server. In environments with many slaves, it is more efficient to initiate several map transfers at once so that the transfers can take place in parallel. The -j flag is used to specify the desired number of parallel jobs: yppush will initiate the specified number of transfers immediately and listen for responses. If the number of specified parallel jobs is less than the number of slave servers, yppush will initiate only the number of specified jobs and then wait for some of them to finish before starting any more. Note that yppush handles callbacks asynchronously, which means that it will collect and display the callback information received from ypxfr(8) as soon as it arrives, even it arrives before all of the map transfer requests have been sent. -h host Can be used to transfer a map to a user-specified machine or group of machines instead of the list of servers contained in the ypservers map. A list of hosts can be specified by using multiple instances of the -h flag. -p path By default, yppush expects all the local NIS maps to be stored under /var/yp. The -p flag can be used to specify an alternate path in the event that the system administrator decides to store the NIS maps somewhere else. -v Verbose mode: it causes yppush to print debugging messages as it runs. Specifying this flag twice makes yppush even more verbose. FILES
/var/yp/[domainname]/ypservers the NIS ypservers map containing the names of all servers in a particular NIS domain SEE ALSO
yp(8), ypserv(8), ypxfr(8) AUTHORS
Bill Paul <wpaul@ctr.columbia.edu> BUGS
The mechanism for transferring NIS maps in NIS v1 is different than that in NIS version 2. This version of yppush has support for transfer- ring maps to NIS v2 systems only. BSD
February 5, 1995 BSD
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