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Full Discussion: Intermitent System Reboot's
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Intermitent System Reboot's Post 30614 by Cameron on Thursday 24th of October 2002 10:32:30 AM
Old 10-24-2002
Guys,

Found this in the /var/adm/syslog (must have been looking in on planet Mars the first time). The following is an extract of the syslog that is generated from a script that checks the log every evening at 23:55.
Code:
Oct 24 12:37:37 www3 lmail[27608]: Cannot open /usr/spool/mail/nobody: Operation would block
Oct 24 14:46:50 www3 lpd[381]: unknown printer: lf=/var/spool/lp/logs/output_log
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 ifor_sld: PMDCT: Error accepting server side connection. (PM_THREAD_IPC_TIMEOUT) 
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 ifor_sld: PMDCT: Error accepting server side connection. (PM_THREAD_IPC_TIMEOUT) 
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 ifor_pmd: cleanup; terminating
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 ifor_pmd: cleanup; terminating
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 sco_cpd: cpd: pmd died
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 Xsco[406]: Xsco: ERROR- Failed to initialize policy manager. (IFOR_PM_FATAL)
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 Xsco[406]: Xsco: ERROR- Failed to initialize policy manager. (IFOR_PM_FATAL)
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 ifor_pmd: terminated with status 100
Oct 24 14:46:57 www3 ifor_pmd: terminated with status 100
Oct 24 14:47:00 www3 ifor_pmd: ^M
         The Licensing Policy Manager Daemon (ifor_pmd) has terminated^M
         and been restarted.  This is a normal occurrence only when a^M
         license is removed with the License Manager utility.  If this is^M
         not the case, your system may have a problem which could lead to^M
         undesirable behavior.  Contact your SCO service provider for^M
         help if you suspect that there is a problem.^M 
Oct 24 16:34:25 www3 ftpd[15956]: #2 open of pid file failed: No such file or directory
Oct 24 16:40:01 www3 ftpd[18453]: #2 open of pid file failed: No such file or directory

What's this Licensing Policy Manager Daemon (ifor_pmd) ??
 

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fdmns(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							  fdmns(4)

NAME
fdmns - contains file domain names and devices DESCRIPTION
The fdmns directory ensures access to file domains by providing symbolic links to every volume in the file domain. The mkfdmn, rmvol, and addvol utilities automatically manage the fdmns directory. Each file domain is described by its own subdirectory within the fdmns direc- tory. Back up the fdmns directory structure regularly using the vdump utility or any other backup utility (dump, tar, cpio). If the contents of the fdmns directory are deleted or corrupted, restore the directory from your most recent backup tape. You must also restore the fdmns directory after installing a new version of the operating system. Always keep a hardcopy record of each file domain and its associated volumes in case a backup copy of the fdmns directory is unavailable. If you have a record, you can reconstruct the fdmns directory structure. The following is a sample fdmns directory: total 2 drwxr-x--- 2 root system 512 Nov 24 18:35 scratch/ drwxr-xr-x 2 root system 512 Nov 24 18:35 usr/ ./scratch: total 0 lrwxr-x--- 1 root system 10 Oct 23 15:13 dsk10c@ -> /dev/disk/dsk10c lrwxr-x--- 1 root system 10 Oct 24 11:33 dsk11c@ -> /dev/disk/dsk11c lrwxr-x--- 1 root system 9 Oct 13 18:29 dsk8c@ -> /dev/disk/dsk8c ./usr: total 0 lrwxr-x--- 1 root system 9 Oct 24 10:52 dsk2g@ -> /dev/disk/dsk2c lrwxr-x--- 1 root system 9 Nov 24 10:35 dsk9c@ -> /dev/disk/dsk9c RESTRICTIONS
Do not remove or modify the contents of this directory. If the fdmns file becomes corrupted, you can no longer access (or mount) any file- set in the file domains. SEE ALSO
advfs(4), vdump(8), mkfdmn(8), vrestore(8), showfdmn(8) fdmns(4)
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