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Operating Systems Solaris T4 replaced motherboard - recovering LDOM config? Post 303000876 by hicksd8 on Friday 21st of July 2017 12:11:10 PM
Old 07-21-2017
I'm no expert on this one either but it seems that the ldom configuration can be saved (backed up) from the service processor to a XML file.

If you have this XML file you can restore it after a rebuild.

Oracle VM SPARC - LDOM configuration Backup and Restore - UnixArena
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MINIDLNA(1)						      General Commands Manual						       MINIDLNA(1)

NAME
minidlna -- lightweight DLNA/UPnP-AV server SYNOPSIS
minidlna [-f config_file] [-d] [-a -listening_ip] [-p port] [-s serial] [-m model_number] [-t notify_interval] [-P pid_filename] [-w url] [-R] minidlna [-h | -V] DESCRIPTION
The minidlna daemon is a DLNA/UPnP-AV server sharing media files (video, music and pictures) to clients on your network. Clients are typi- cally multimedia players such as vlc, totem and xbmc, and devices such as portable media players, smartphones, televisions, video game enter- tainment systems and blu-ray players. OPTIONS
All the options below (except -f) can also be set in a configuration file (see minidlna.conf(5)). -a listening_ip IP address the daemon should be listening on. -d Activate debug mode (do not daemonize). -f config_file Specify the location of the configuration file. Uses /etc/minidlna.conf by default. -h Show help and exit. -m model_number Model number the daemon will report to clients in its XML description. -P pid_filename PID file to use; the default is /run/minidlna.pid. -p port Port number to listen on; the default is port 80. -R Forces a full rescan of the media files. -s serial Serial number the daemon will report to clients in its XML description. -t notify_interval Notify interval, in seconds; defaults to 895 seconds. -V Show the program version and exit. -w url Sets the presentation url; the default is http address. FILES
/etc/minidlna.conf Default system-wide configuration file. See minidlna.conf(5) for details on the syntax. SEE ALSO
minidlna.conf(5) Debian July 21, 2011 Debian
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