11-15-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
paqman
I am trying to configure dump devices on my AIX server. Running 7100-03-04-1441. My dump device needs to be about 2GB in size. My PP Size is 1024MB, so I create the device with 2 PPs. When I run lslv on the dump device, it shows the 2 PPs, and a PP Size of 1024 megabytes. However, a dumpcheck -p shows that my dump device is only 256MB in size. dumpcheck seems to think my PP Size is only 128MB.
My rootvg does show that the size used is indeed 2GB. So where is this extra space going, and why is dumpcheck not reporting all the size for my dump device?
Just because you create a logical volume of type "dump" doesn't mean it is used as dump. Use the
sysdumpdev to find out which dump device is actually in use. You can also use this command to find out how big the dump device has to be (
-e, estimate) and to set the dump device (
-Pp <device>).
On another note, you seem to have doctored with the rootvg because it is quite unusual to have a 1GB PP-size. Usual PP-sizes in rootvgs are indeed 64MB and 128MB. I don't know what exactly you did, but: might it be that this has something to do with it?
I hope this helps.
bakunin
This User Gave Thanks to bakunin For This Post:
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LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
savecore
SAVECORE(8) BSD System Manager's Manual SAVECORE(8)
NAME
savecore -- save a core dump of the operating system
SYNOPSIS
savecore -c [-v] [device ...]
savecore -C [-v] [device ...]
savecore [-fkvz] [-m maxdumps] [directory [device ...]]
DESCRIPTION
The savecore utility copies a core dump into directory, or the current working directory if no directory argument is given, and enters a
reboot message and information about the core dump into the system log.
The options are as follows:
-C Check to see if a dump exists, and display a brief message to indicate the status. An exit status of 0 indicates that a dump is
there, 1 indicates that none exists. This option is compatible only with the [-v] option.
-c Clear the dump, so that future invocations of savecore will ignore it.
-f Force a dump to be taken even if either the dump was cleared or if the dump header information is inconsistent.
-k Do not clear the dump after saving it.
-m maxdumps Maximum number of dumps to store. Once the number of stored dumps is equal to maxdumps the counter will restart from 0.
-v Print out some additional debugging information. Specify twice for more information.
-z Compress the core dump and kernel (see gzip(1)).
The savecore utility looks for dumps on each device specified by the device argument(s), or on each device in /etc/fstab marked as ``dump''
or ``swap''. The savecore utility checks the core dump in various ways to make sure that it is complete. If it passes these checks, it
saves the core image in directory/vmcore.# and information about the core in directory/info.#. For kernel textdumps generated with the
textdump(4) facility, output will be stored in the tar(5) format and named directory/textdump.tar.#. The ``#'' is the number from the first
line of the file directory/bounds, and it is incremented and stored back into the file each time savecore successfully runs.
The savecore utility also checks the available disk space before attempting to make the copies. If there is insufficient disk space in the
file system containing directory, or if the file directory/minfree exists and the number of free kilobytes (for non-superusers) in the file
system after the copies were made would be less than the number in the first line of this file, the copies are not attempted.
If savecore successfully copies the kernel and the core dump, the core dump is cleared so that future invocations of savecore will ignore it.
The savecore utility is meant to be called near the end of the initialization file /etc/rc (see rc(8)).
SEE ALSO
gzip(1), getbootfile(3), textdump(4), tar(5), dumpon(8), syslogd(8)
HISTORY
The savecore utility appeared in 4.1BSD.
Support for kernel textdumps appeared in FreeBSD 7.1.
BUGS
The minfree code does not consider the effect of compression or sparse files.
BSD
December 17, 2012 BSD