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Operating Systems Solaris How to map device to mount point? Post 303024696 by Peasant on Monday 15th of October 2018 11:16:08 AM
Old 10-15-2018
Solaris 11 on x86 or SPARC ?
I'll presume it's SPARC as far as Oracle VM info goes ...

Try the following iostat command :
Code:
iostat -xcnzCTd 3 10

As manual states :
Code:
....
     -x          Report  extended  disk  statistics.  By  default, disks are
                   identified by instance names such as ssd23 or  md301.  Com-
                   bining the x option with the -n option causes disk names to
                   display in the cXtYdZsN format, more easily associated with
                   physical  hardware characteristics. Using the cXtYdZsN for-
                   mat is particularly helpful in  the  FibreChannel  environ-
                   ments where the FC World Wide Name appears in the t field.
...

Outside of yourldom, on the control/service domain which is hosting that disk service, you will need to match the disks added in virtual disk service (vds) and ID chosen when disk is added to yourldom
Code:
ldm add-vdisk id=N backend-disk backend-disk@some-vds yourldom

Where N above is the number you see for that specified disk inside ldom on iostat/format/zpool commands and the numeration of disk(s) you see when doing ldm list -l yourldom.

This assumes you are not using ZVOLs or metadevices as disk backends on control/service domain.
If you do, more stuff will need to be done to match the physical to virtual disk.

But ZVOL as disk backend to ldom and then vxfs while having zfs filesystem as well in ldom sounds like a nightmare....

For further analysis, i would required output of following command, which can be quite long so can attach them or something.

Code:
# On control/service domain 
ldm list-services
ldm list -l <yourldom>
ldm list
echo "::memstat" | mdb -k
tail -10 /etc/system
# On LDOM for start
echo | format

Hope that helps
Regards
Peasant.
 

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root_archive(1M)					  System Administration Commands					  root_archive(1M)

NAME
root_archive - manage bootable miniroot archives SYNOPSIS
/boot/solaris/bin/root_archive pack archive root /boot/solaris/bin/root_archive unpack archive root /boot/solaris/bin/root_archive packmedia solaris_image root /boot/solaris/bin/root_archive unpackmedia solaris_image root DESCRIPTION
The root_archive utility is used to manage bootable miniroot archives and is currently only available on x86 platforms. The utility can pack and unpack boot/root archives in both ufs and hsfs (iso9660) format. It will always generate ufs archives. root_archive also uses the lofi file driver to export a file as a block device (see lofi(7D)) and mount to mount or unmount file systems and remote resources (see mount(1M)). root_archive requires the same privileges that are needed to run these commands. SUBCOMMANDS
The root_archive command has the following subcommands: pack archive root Pack from the image found under the root directory to the archive. unpack archive root Unpack from the archive to an unpacked image under the root directory. packmedia solaris_image root Pack the solaris image to the root directory. unpackmedia solaris_image root Unpack the solaris image from the root directory. For packmedia and unpackmedia, other items that do not go into the ramdisk image are copied or uncopied (see cpio(1)) as well. Specifi- cally, this includes all the packaging databases needed for pkgadd and the other packaging utilities to succeed which are not used in the running and hence pruned to conserve memory. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Unpacking the Solaris x86 install image The following command unpacks the current Solaris image from the root directory: # root_archive unpackmedia /export/nv/solarisdvd.nvx_dvd/latest /export/Boot Where /export/nv/solarisdvd.nvx_dvd/latest represents a path to a Solaris x86 install image and /export/Boot is a directory that will be purged or created, as necessary. Example 2 Packing the Solaris x86 install image The following command packs the current Solaris image to the root directory: # root_archive packmedia /export/nv/solarisdvd.nvx_dvd/latest /export/Boot EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 The command completed successfully. 1 The command exited due to an error. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Stable | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
cpio(1), bootadm(1M), mount(1M), attributes(5), lofi(7D) SunOS 5.11 26 Sep 2005 root_archive(1M)
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