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Operating Systems AIX Can I use mkdvd to create bootable DVD from mksysb on tape Post 303005919 by alanp36 on Tuesday 24th of October 2017 04:05:01 PM
Old 10-24-2017
Thanks Robin,

The rootvg on this system is around 40GB. Customer keeps a lot of data filesystems in rootvg (we didn't set this up), and doesn't want to change anything. They don't want to add any disk, as the server is migrating off onto our hardware.

In fact I think it's going to be possible for us to make a tape drive available to the destination server, so may not have to worry about the DVDs.

Didn't really want to exclude filesystems from the backup and have to get them across later, hence the question about making the DVDs from the bootable tape backup. Would have been handy if AIX provided that as an option, if not the prettiest solution. From what you say, it sounds like it's not likely to work though, and given that Dr Google doesn't come up with any hits regarding this approach, I'm guessing it's not possible.

Thanks for taking the time to reply though, it's nice to at least know it isn't an option.

Cheers,
 

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RARP(8) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   RARP(8)

NAME
rarpd - Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) daemon SYNOPSIS
rarpd [-aAvde] [-b bootdir ] [ interface ] DESCRIPTION
Rarpd is a daemon which responds to RARP requests. RARP is used by some machines at boot time to discover their IP address. They provide their Ethernet address and rarpd responds with their IP address if it finds it in the ethers database (either /etc/ethers file or NIS+ lookup) and using DNS lookup if ethers database contains a hostname and not an IP address. By default rarpd also checks if a bootable image with a name starting with the IP address in hexadecimal uppercase letters is present in the TFTP boot directory (usually /tftpboot ) before it decides to respond to the RARP request. OPTIONS
-a Do not bind to the interface. -A Respond to ARP as well as RARP requests. -v Tell the user what is going on by being verbose. -d Debugging mode. Do not detach from the tty. -e Skip the check for bootable image in the TFTP boot directory. If not present, then even if the Ethernet address is present in the ethers database but the bootable image for the resolved IP does not exist, rarpd will not respond to the request. -b bootdir Use bootdir instead of the default /tftpboot as the TFTP boot directory for bootable image checks. OBSOLETES
This rarpd obsoletes kernel rarp daemon present in Linux kernels up to 2.2 which was controlled by the rarp(8) command. FILES
/etc/ethers, /etc/nsswitch.conf, /tftpboot SEE ALSO
ethers(5) AUTHORS
Alexey Kuznetsov, <kuznet@ms2.inr.ac.ru> Jakub Jelinek, <jakub@redhat.com> rarpd 7 April 2000 RARP(8)
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