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Operating Systems Solaris How to map device to mount point? Post 303024668 by Sean on Sunday 14th of October 2018 11:29:34 AM
Old 10-14-2018
Code:
 zpool iostat -v
             capacity     operations    bandwidth
pool      alloc   free   read  write   read  write
--------  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----
ds        2.99T  1.46T    113    147  13.4M  3.90M
  c1d212   667G   349G     23     30  2.90M   850K
  c1d213   666G   350G     23     30  2.89M   845K
  c1d214   668G   348G     23     30  2.90M   856K
  c1d215   666G   350G     23     30  2.89M   839K
  c1d216   398G  98.3G     18     25  1.84M   598K
--------  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----
rpool     32.6G  26.9G      0      5  36.5K  36.7K
  c1d203  32.6G  26.9G      0      5  36.5K  36.7K
--------  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----


I wanted the above results related the devices vdc* shown I/O performance -xncz , how is c1d* related to vdc*?



zfs list


there are too many shown :


ds/S0*

And no shown related to c1d* nor vdc*



Thanks!
 

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allocate(1)                                                                                                                            allocate(1)

NAME
allocate - device allocation SYNOPSIS
allocate [-s] [-U uname] device allocate [-s] [-U uname] -g dev-type allocate [-s] [-U uname] -F device The allocate utility manages the ownership of devices through its allocation mechanism. It ensures that each device is used by only one qualified user at a time. The device argument specifies the device to be manipulated. To preserve the integrity of the device's owner, the allocate operation is exe- cuted on all the device special files associated with that device. The argument dev-type is the device type to be operated on and can only be used with the -g option. The default allocate operation allocates the device special files associated with device to the uid of the current process. If the -F option is specified, the device cleaning program is executed when allocation is performed. This cleaning program is found in /etc/security/lib. The name of this program is found in the device_allocate(4) entry for the device in the dev-exec field. Only authorized users may allocate a device. The required authorizations are specified in device_allocate(4). The following options are supported: -g dev-type Allocates a non-allocated device with a device-type matching dev-type. -s Silent. Suppresses any diagnostic output. -F device Reallocates the device allocated to another user. This option is often used with -U to reallocate a specific device to a specific user. Only a user with the solaris.device.revoke authorization is permitted to use this option. -U uname Uses the user ID uname instead of the user ID of the current process when performing the allocate operation. Only a user with the solaris.device.revoke authorization is permitted to use this option. The following exit values are returned: non--zero An error occurred. /etc/security/device_allocate /etc/security/device_maps /etc/security/dev/* /etc/security/lib/* See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ deallocate(1), list_devices(1), bsmconv(1M), dminfo(1M), mkdevalloc(1M), mkdevmaps(1M), device_allocate(4), device_maps(4), attributes(5) The functionality described in this man page is available only if the Basic Security Module (BSM) has been enabled. See bsmconv(1M) for more information. /etc/security/dev, mkdevalloc(1M), and mkdevmaps(1M) might not be supported in a future release of the Solaris Operating Environment. 28 Mar 2005 allocate(1)
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