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Full Discussion: Is my XIV device open?
Operating Systems AIX Is my XIV device open? Post 303043009 by zxmaus on Wednesday 15th of January 2020 08:24:31 PM
Old 01-15-2020
if you do this on ASM disks or gpfs disks you are wiping the header. The device will stay up til your next reboot and be beautiful and clean after the reboot so this is a terrible idea.

You do get an output from the commands I listed even with ASM devices and GPFS disks and even from completely unassigned open disks. It might be a cryptic unreadable output but it is an output. If you get nothing or a one-line-error the disks are not open.

But maybe I have a different understanding what open means. Are you trying to find out if the disks are unused? Are you using AIX mpio or any kind of multipathing software? With ASM, before you make ANY changes to the disks, ask the DBAs to backup the disk headers. Strictly speaking by design, AIX has no idea if the disks are used or not - but oracle will hold a lock on them while still allocated - which is a curse and a blessing for above reason - you will STILL wipe the header. For gpfs, the cluster itself should be able to tell you which disks it is using - try
Code:
mmlsnsd

command. For normal disks in VGs, a simple
Code:
lspv

will tell you which disks are not in use from LVM perspective.

Last edited by zxmaus; 01-15-2020 at 09:31 PM..
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CCD(4)							   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						    CCD(4)

NAME
ccd -- Concatenated disk driver SYNOPSIS
pseudo-device ccd [count] DESCRIPTION
The ccd driver provides the capability of combining one or more disks/partitions into one virtual disk. This document assumes that you're familiar with how to generate kernels, how to properly configure disks and pseudo-devices in a kernel con- figuration file, and how to partition disks. Note that the 'raw' partitions of the disks must not be combined. Each component partition should be offset at least one cylinder from the beginning of the component disk. This avoids potential conflicts between the component disk's disklabel and the ccd's disklabel. The kernel will only allow component partitions of type FS_CCD. But for now, it allows partition of all types since some port lacks support of an on- disk BSD disklabel. The partition of FS_UNUSED may be rejected because device driver of component disk will refuse it. In order to compile in support for the ccd, you must add a line similar to the following to your kernel configuration file: pseudo-device ccd 4 # concatenated disk devices The count argument is how many ccds memory is allocated for at boot time. In this example, no more than 4 ccds may be configured. A ccd may be either serially concatenated or interleaved. To serially concatenate the partitions, specify the interleave factor of 0. If a ccd is interleaved correctly, a ``striping'' effect is achieved, which can increase performance. Since the interleave factor is expressed in units of DEV_BSIZE, one must account for sector sizes other than DEV_BSIZE in order to calculate the correct interleave. The kernel will not allow an interleave factor less than the size of the largest component sector divided by DEV_BSIZE. Note that best performance is achieved if all component disks have the same geometry and size. Optimum striping cannot occur with different disk types. Also note that the total size of concatenated disk may vary depending on the interleave factor even if the exact same components are concate- nated. And an old on-disk disklabel may be read after interleave factor change. As a result, the disklabel may contain wrong partition geometry and will cause an error when doing I/O near the end of concatenated disk. There is a run-time utility that is used for configuring ccds. See ccdconfig(8) for more information. WARNINGS
If just one (or more) of the disks in a non-mirrored ccd fails, the entire file system will be lost. FILES
/dev/{,r}ccd* ccd device special files. SEE ALSO
config(1), MAKEDEV(8), ccdconfig(8), fsck(8), mount(8), newfs(8) HISTORY
The concatenated disk driver was originally written at the University of Utah. BSD
March 5, 2004 BSD
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