Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Misconfiguration detected Adapter interface name en 3 Adapter offset 0 Post 303035968 by bakunin on Tuesday 11th of June 2019 07:13:49 AM
Old 06-11-2019
First off: AIX 5.2 is at least 10 years out of support, the support for its successor 5.3 ended 2012. The support for some Power5 systems (if they have been upgraded with Power6- and Power6plus-processors) also ended beginning this year, even the Power7-support will end in September.

So, whatever you do, you should URGENTLY consider updating to anything recent.

You said the LUNs you are missing come from a FC-connected storage: did you make sure the zoning is correct? If you restored the system from an mksysb image then chances are you use another FC-adapter with a different WWPN and hence you need to modify the zones accordingly. You *do* know what "zoning" means, yes? Everything else is, i suppose, just coming from the not-found disks.

By the way: you should always give your LVs, VGs and FSes meaningful names: names like /dev/fslv00 are not meaningful and will over time contribute to the overall confusion.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
This User Gave Thanks to bakunin For This Post:
 

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
LVM(8)							      System Manager's Manual							    LVM(8)

NAME
lvm - Linux Logical Volume Manager DESCRIPTION
lvm is a logical volume manager for Linux. It enables you to concatenate several physical volumes (hard disks etc.) into a so called vol- ume group (VG, see pvcreate(8) and vgcreate(8) ) forming a storage pool, like a virtual disk. IDE, SCSI disks as well as multiple devices (MD) are supported. The storage capacity of a volume group can be divided into logical volumes (LVs), like virtual disk partitions. The size of a logical volume is in multiples of physical extents (PEs, see lvcreate(8) ). The size of the physical extents can be configured at volume group creation time. If a logical volume is too small or too large you can change its size at runtime ( see lvextend(8) and lvreduce(8) ). lvcreate(8) can be used to create snapshots of existing logical volumes (so called original logical volumes in this context) as well. Creating a snapshot logical volumes grants access to the contents of the original logical volume it is associated with and exposes the read only contents at the creation time of the snapshot. This is useful for backups or for keeping several versions of filesystems online. If you run out of space in a volume group it is possible to add one or more pvcreate'd disks to the system and put them into an existing volume group ( see vgextend(8) ). The space on these new physical volumes can be dynamically added to logical volumes in that volume group ( see lvextend(8) ). To remove a physical volume from the system you can move allocated logical extents to different physical volumes ( see pvmove(8) ). After the pvmove the volume group can be reduced with the vgreduce(8) command. Inactive volume groups must be activated with vgchange(8) before use. vgcreate(8) automatically activates a newly created volume group. Abbreviations PV for physical volume, PE for physical extent, VG for volume group, LV for logical volume, and LE for logical extent. Command naming convention All command names corresponding to physical volumes start with pv, all the ones concerned with volume groups start with vg and all for log- ical volumes with lv. General purpose commands for the lvm as a whole start with lvm. VGDA
The volume group descriptor area (or VGDA for short) holds the necessary metadata to handle the LVM functionality. It is stored at the beginning of each pvcreate'd disk. It contains four parts: one PV descriptor, one VG descriptor, the LV descriptors and several PE descriptors. LE descriptors are derived from the PE ones at vgchange(8) time. Automatic backups of the VGDA are stored in files in /etc/lvmconf/ (please see vgcfgbackup(8)/vgcfgrestore(8) too). Take care to include these files in your regular (tape) backups as well. Limits Currently up to 99 volume groups with a grand total of 256 logical volumes can be created. The limit for the logical volumes is not caused by the LVM but by Linux 8 bit device minor numbers. This means that you can have 99 volume groups with 1-3 logical volumes each or on the other hand 1 volume group with up to 256 logical vol- umes or anything in between these extreme examples. Depending on the physical extent size specified at volume group creation time (see vgcreate(8) ), logical volumes of between a maximum of 512 Megabytes and 1 Petabyte can be created. Actual Linux kernels on IA32 limit these lvm possibilities to a maximum of 2 Terabytes per logical and per physical volume as well. This enables you to have as much as 256 Terabytes under LVM control with all possible 128 scsi disk subsystems. You can have up to 65534 logical extents (on IA32) in a logical volume at the cost of 1 Megabyte in kernel memory. Phys- ical volumes can have up to 65534 physical extents. /proc filesystem support The operational state of active volume groups with their physical and logical volumes can be found in the /proc/lvm/ directory. /proc/lvm/global contains a summary of all available information regarding all VGs, LVs and PVs. The two flags for PV status in brackets mean A/I for active/inactive and A/N for allocatable or non-allocatable. The four flags for LV status in brackets mean A/I for active/inactive, R/W for read-only or read/write, D/C for discontiguous or contiguous and L/S for linear or striped. S can optionally be followed by the number of stripes in the set. At /proc/lvm/VGs/ starts a subdirectory hierarchy containing information about every VG in a different subdirectory named /proc/lvm/VGs/VolumeGroupName where VolumeGroupName stands for an arbitrary VG name. /proc/lvm/VGs/Vol- umeGroupName/ in turn holds a file group containing summary information for the VG as a total. /proc/lvm/VGs/VolumeGroupName/LVs/Logi- calVolumeName holds information for an arbitrary LV named LogicalVolumeName /proc/lvm/VGs/VolumeGroupName/PVs/PhysicalVolumeName contains information for an arbitrary PV named PhysicalVolumeName. All of the information in the files below /proc/lvm/VGs/ is presented in attribute/value pairs to be easyly parsable. Examples We have disk partitions /dev/sda3, /dev/sdb1 and /dev/hda2 free for use and want to create a volume group named "test_vg". Steps required: 1. Change partition type for these 3 partitions to 0x8e with fdisk. (see pvcreate(8): 0x8e identifies LVM partitions) 2. pvcreate /dev/sda3 /dev/sdb1 /dev/hda2 3. vgcreate test_vg /dev/sda3 /dev/sdb1 /dev/hda2 With our volume group "test_vg" now online, we can create logical volumes. For example a logical volume with a size of 100MB and standard name (/dev/test_vg/lvol1) and another one named "my_test_lv" with size 200MB striped (RAID0) across all the three physical volumes. Steps required: 1. lvcreate -L 100 test_vg 2. lvcreate -L 200 -n my_test_lv -i 3 test_vg Now let's rock and roll. For example create a file system with "mkfs -t ext2 /dev/test_vg/my_test_lv" and mount it with "mount /dev/test_vg/my_test_lv /usr1" See also e2fsadm(8), lvchange(8), lvcreate(8), lvdisplay(8), lvextend(8), lvmchange(8), lvmdiskscan(8), lvmcreate_initrd(8), lvmsadc(8), lvmsar(8), lvreduce(8), lvremove(8), lvrename(8), lvscan(8), pvchange(8), pvcreate(8), pvdata(8), pvdisplay(8), pvmove(8), pvscan(8), vgcfgbackup(8), vgcfgrestore(8), vgchange(8), vgck(8), vgcreate(8), vgdisplay(8), vgexport(8), vgextend(8), vgimport(8), vgmerge(8), vgmknodes(8), vgreduce(8), vgremove(8), vgrename(8), vgscan(8), vgsplit(8) AUTHOR
Heinz Mauelshagen <Linux-LVM@Sistina.com> Heinz Mauelshagen LVM TOOLS LVM(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:57 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy