Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Misconfiguration detected Adapter interface name en 3 Adapter offset 0 Post 303035959 by RecoveryOne on Monday 10th of June 2019 07:57:21 PM
Old 06-10-2019
Oh. Not good.
So, looks like TCPIP is up and running so you are pretty far along in the boot. A control-c/spam enter a few times might get you to a login prompt, if you time it between the messages printed to console.

If you do manage to get in, you will likely be spammed with all the happy fun AIX stuff it prints to console. I think in 5.3 TL7?? There's the swcons command, you could do a swcons /tmp/console.out to temporally send all messages printed to console to file. To revert it back just typing swcons.
If you have telnet/ssh it might be responsive on the network. Not sure however.
So, was this lpar part of a cluster?

Next lets go talk about single user mode!
Also, do you have any sort of HMC or is this a standalone frame?

If standalone, this should work (again 5.2 not my cup of tea). Lets bring this lpar up in single user mode. With your console still attached, bounce the lpar (nicely if hmc, or well...press the magical power button if you must). You should see the system start to IPL, and if you are sitting near it, it should beep on the frame (if so equipped) and beep/flash your console. Alternate, if you have a monitor/kbd hooked up it would likely flash/beep there so yeah.
Now, you should see an option of choosing another boot list during the time of the beeping/flashing. Should be boot selection. An option for 'Press 6 to start diagnostics'.
Normal AIX boot header of 'Welcome to AIX' will display, and you will be presented with a diagnostic screen which you can enter past. The next screen should have an option for Start Shell, or Single User mode.


IBM has some good docs about what can and cannot be done in that mode and how to exit single user and get into multiuser. Here's one now! IBM Booting AIX in Single-User Mode
From there, I can't say which commands will work and which wont. I only had to go into single user mode once for a really messed up inittab issue that a vendor left me with!


Again I could be way off the processes as I have 6.1 and 7.1 under my belt. The 5.3 systems and our lowly 4.3.3 box was retired as I came in.

Anyways, do you have other backups of this lpar?
Good news, it sounds like your filesystems are protected if they are on SAN, you just need to get to a point where you can bring them in.
Bad news, depending on if any excludes were done you may end up with a painful rebuild, if other data wasn't backed up via other means.

If you have the knowledge base of 5.2, I'd really look at setting up a mirrored rootvg once you are up and running. I've done both a local hdisk0 and a SAN provided hdisk1 as a mirror before with 6.1 TL7. Not sure if applicable with 5.2, I know a lot of things have changed.

Unfortunately a lot of information regarding 5.2 and even 5.3 is lost in the mix, so not to be 'you should look at updating guy', but....should look at updating Smilie A small Power9, or Power8, heck P7 lines will run rings around a p5. In fact, I'm pushing for that now, we have a few p5's still and they are dropping like flies. Lost two raid controllers (drives ok, but sissas0 AND sissas1 on same frame went belly up.) Another had sysplanar0 errors. And a 3rd I keep under my desk in the office as a heater in the winter months has been reporting predictive failure on the service processor for at least a year now if not longer.


Sorry trevian, I may not be much help in the long run.
Feel free to post what you can, and I'll try to assist when I can, but just all before my time. Perhaps one of the mods here who've worked with AIX for a really long time may have some other ideas?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

LAN Adapter

Im newest in unix, Please, give me solution for installing lan adapter if driver not found in the list of ethernet drivers ihave unix driver in a dos diskete please give me the other solution and tell me where the domain of unix class online, so ican read from it. Thank's very much (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ade_muhdiat
3 Replies

2. Solaris

Which SCSI Adapter?

Hi. I need to find a simple SCSI adapter card for a Sun Ultra 5 workstation. I don't need the type w/ ethernet attached (e.g. X1032) as I already have ethernet onboard & they are more spendy. I know Adaptec is out, but what unit would work? I am attaching an external SCSI tape unit to this... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Plain Person
4 Replies

3. Solaris

Creator 3D Video Adapter

Hi everyone, it's me the Solaris novice once again. Here's my situation. - I bought a Sun Ultra 10 Creator 3D Workstation and Sony 19" SVGA Monitor package deal. - The system has the Creator 3D Video Adapter installed but I could not use it because the adapter has a 13w3 connection and my... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jbarbuto
5 Replies

4. HP-UX

what is an adapter?

Hi , Hi what is an adapter?what is its use ? How to log into a tibco server from unix home directory. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: megh
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Simulated driver for Network Interface Adapter

Hi all, I got sort of a task to do. I have to write in C "simulated network driver". What does it mean? - It has to run on all network adapters - It has to be as simple as it can be - It has to run on all linux distributions (or at least most of them) - It does not have to run a network... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chrisdot
4 Replies

6. SCO

Installing LAN adapter

I inserted a PCI Realtek RTL8139 network adapter on a PC running SCO Openserver 5.0.6. I successfully loaded drivers and I'm trying to install the card with netconfig command, unfortunately without success. Here are the steps I follow to install the card: I run netconfig, from menu 'hardware'... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kampus
2 Replies

7. Hardware

SCSI Ultra320 80->68 adapter

I need to connect 80pin SCA Ultra320 SCSI hdd to 68pin. There are rumors that some bad "passive" adapters with problematic termination can fry the HDD. The adapter we got is Assmann ABSCA-2. Hard drive is 'Fujitsu MAW3073NC' Do we need to set any jumpers before turning it on? We already had... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: orange47
0 Replies

8. AIX

Dedicate graphics adapter ?

Hello, Runing VIO and couple lpars on POWER blade. I want to dedicate graphics adapter(ati0) to one lpar. Is that possible ? I tried to do that using IVM (I/O Adapter Management->View/Modify Physical Adapters->Modify partition assignment): Failed to remove adapter U78A6.001.WIH4088-P2-C8... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vilius
1 Replies

9. AIX

Vscsi and npiv on same adapter

Hi, I want to change from vscsi to npiv. Is it possible to use both on the same adapter, so we can change the systems one by one, or must we place a second FC adapter in the VIO servers? Thanks, Ronald (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ronaldm60
2 Replies

10. Red Hat

Ethernet Adapter not detected.

Hi, I have installed Oracle Enterprise Linux 5 in my PC. After the installation the Ethernet Card is not got detected. But I could able to get the details using the command lspci -a: 01:00.0 Ethernet controller: Attansic Technology Corp. L1 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter (rev b0). But I could... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: chidhu.anu
4 Replies
SHUTDOWN(8)						Linux System Administrator's Manual					       SHUTDOWN(8)

NAME
shutdown - bring the system down SYNOPSIS
/sbin/shutdown [-t sec] [-arkhncfF] time [warning-message] DESCRIPTION
shutdown brings the system down in a secure way. All logged-in users are notified that the system is going down, and login(1) is blocked. It is possible to shut the system down immediately or after a specified delay. All processes are first notified that the system is going down by the signal SIGTERM. This gives programs like vi(1) the time to save the file being edited, mail and news processing programs a chance to exit cleanly, etc. shutdown does its job by signalling the init process, asking it to change the runlevel. Runlevel 0 is used to halt the system, runlevel 6 is used to reboot the system, and runlevel 1 is used to put to system into a state where administrative tasks can be performed; this is the default if neither the -h or -r flag is given to shutdown. To see which actions are taken on halt or reboot see the appropriate entries for these runlevels in the file /etc/inittab. OPTIONS
-a Use /etc/shutdown.allow. -t sec Tell init(8) to wait sec seconds between sending processes the warning and the kill signal, before changing to another runlevel. -k Don't really shutdown; only send the warning messages to everybody. -r Reboot after shutdown. -h Halt after shutdown. -n [DEPRECATED] Don't call init(8) to do the shutdown but do it ourself. The use of this option is discouraged, and its results are not always what you'd expect. -f Skip fsck on reboot. -F Force fsck on reboot. -c Cancel an already running shutdown. With this option it is of course not possible to give the time argument, but you can enter a explanatory message on the command line that will be sent to all users. time When to shutdown. warning-message Message to send to all users. The time argument can have different formats. First, it can be an absolute time in the format hh:mm, in which hh is the hour (1 or 2 dig- its) and mm is the minute of the hour (in two digits). Second, it can be in the format +m, in which m is the number of minutes to wait. The word now is an alias for +0. If shutdown is called with a delay, it creates the advisory file /etc/nologin which causes programs such as login(1) to not allow new user logins. Shutdown removes this file if it is stopped before it can signal init (i.e. it is cancelled or something goes wrong). It also removes it before calling init to change the runlevel. The -f flag means `reboot fast'. This only creates an advisory file /fastboot which can be tested by the system when it comes up again. The boot rc file can test if this file is present, and decide not to run fsck(1) since the system has been shut down in the proper way. After that, the boot process should remove /fastboot. The -F flag means `force fsck'. This only creates an advisory file /forcefsck which can be tested by the system when it comes up again. The boot rc file can test if this file is present, and decide to run fsck(1) with a special `force' flag so that even properly unmounted filesystems get checked. After that, the boot process should remove /forcefsck. The -n flag causes shutdown not to call init, but to kill all running processes itself. shutdown will then turn off quota, accounting, and swapping and unmount all filesystems. ACCESS CONTROL
shutdown can be called from init(8) when the magic keys CTRL-ALT-DEL are pressed, by creating an appropriate entry in /etc/inittab. This means that everyone who has physical access to the console keyboard can shut the system down. To prevent this, shutdown can check to see if an authorized user is logged in on one of the virtual consoles. If shutdown is called with the -a argument (add this to the invocation of shutdown in /etc/inittab), it checks to see if the file /etc/shutdown.allow is present. It then compares the login names in that file with the list of people that are logged in on a virtual console (from /var/run/utmp). Only if one of those authorized users or root is logged in, it will proceed. Otherwise it will write the message shutdown: no authorized users logged in to the (physical) system console. The format of /etc/shutdown.allow is one user name per line. Empty lines and comment lines (prefixed by a #) are allowed. Currently there is a limit of 32 users in this file. Note that if /etc/shutdown.allow is not present, the -a argument is ignored. FILES
/fastboot /etc/inittab /etc/init.d/halt /etc/init.d/reboot /etc/shutdown.allow NOTES
A lot of users forget to give the time argument and are then puzzled by the error message shutdown produces. The time argument is manda- tory; in 90 percent of all cases this argument will be the word now. Init can only capture CTRL-ALT-DEL and start shutdown in console mode. If the system is running the X window System, the X server pro- cesses all key strokes. Some X11 environments make it possible to capture CTRL-ALT-DEL, but what exactly is done with that event depends on that environment. Shutdown wasn't designed to be run setuid. /etc/shutdown.allow is not used to find out who is executing shutdown, it ONLY checks who is currently logged in on (one of the) console(s). AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl SEE ALSO
fsck(8), init(8), halt(8), poweroff(8), reboot(8) Juli 31, 2001 SHUTDOWN(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:09 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy