i dont have aix 4.1.x so all the below info is for aix 4.3.x mabey it can help.
how many drives do you have in the machine? i assume 10.
i am also assumeing:
1) you installed all the disks and ran cfgmgr
2), and you allocated the disks to a volume group
3), and create logical volumes
4), and then mounted them?
you can use commands like lspv to find out all the physical volumes installed.
I have suns machine that holds two hard drives. I only used one. I tryed to make a lan network with my windows xp. When I tryed to restart the machine it wanted to a password. when before I just typed root to log in. So i edited the etc dir. big mistake. So now the machine will not read the hard... (2 Replies)
I trying to learn Unix and I am using SCO Unixware 7.1. Below are three question that I have:
1) Can someone tell me what command I can use to find out the system processor speed.
2) Can someone tell me what command I can use to find out what's the hard drive size of my unix box.
3) Can... (1 Reply)
I'm trying to mount tape drive so I can tar from a cd.
this is what i type: mount /dev/rsd2940.4 /mnt
this is what i get: mount /dev/rsd2940.4 on /mnt : Block device required
I have no idea what that is supposed to mean. It's my understanding that rsd2940.4 is the block device. An... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Can someone answer to my question.I' totally new to Unix.
What is the command for removing the hard drive from the system?
Thanks a lot,
Puja (2 Replies)
:confused: ........I have a new hard drive and I need to copy ALL info from the old to the new. I would like to use the dd command. I know the command is as follows......
dd if=/dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s0 of=/dev/rdsk/????????
Where I have the question marks is the problem.
How do I find out what the... (4 Replies)
Hi
I have 2 75GB SCSI hard drives and 2 250GB SATA hard drives which are using RAID Level 1 respectively. I wana have both FTP and Apache installed on them as services. I'm wondering what's the best partitioning schem? I wana use FC3 as my OS, so, I thought I can use the 75GB hard drive as the /... (0 Replies)
Hi
When I installed opensolaris, I installed it on a 20GB partition. How do I make use of the other 300GB I have spare?
format shows:-
-bash-3.2# format
Searching for disks...done
AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS:
0. c3d0 <DEFAULT cyl 2607 alt 2 hd 255 sec 63>
... (12 Replies)
Im trying to install a fresh version of Fedora 17. I keep getting formating errors when trying to reformat the hard drive. I recieve errors as well I I try to use the entire disk for the install instead of creat new partitions from scratch. I even tried fromatting the disk using PartedMagic and... (7 Replies)
I have connected an external hard drive. I can't find it.
Both ls /media, fdisk -l and ls /dev show nothing.
TIA (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Meow613
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
systemd-machine-id-setup
SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-SETUP(1) systemd-machine-id-setup SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-SETUP(1)NAME
systemd-machine-id-setup - Initialize the machine ID in /etc/machine-id
SYNOPSIS
systemd-machine-id-setup
DESCRIPTION
systemd-machine-id-setup may be used by system installer tools to initialize the machine ID stored in /etc/machine-id at install time, with
a provisioned or randomly generated ID. See machine-id(5) for more information about this file.
If the tool is invoked without the --commit switch, /etc/machine-id is initialized with a valid, new machined ID if it is missing or empty.
The new machine ID will be acquired in the following fashion:
1. If a valid D-Bus machine ID is already configured for the system, the D-Bus machine ID is copied and used to initialize the machine ID
in /etc/machine-id.
2. If run inside a KVM virtual machine and a UUID is configured (via the -uuid option), this UUID is used to initialize the machine ID.
The caller must ensure that the UUID passed is sufficiently unique and is different for every booted instance of the VM.
3. Similarly, if run inside a Linux container environment and a UUID is configured for the container, this is used to initialize the
machine ID. For details, see the documentation of the Container Interface[1].
4. Otherwise, a new ID is randomly generated.
The --commit switch may be used to commit a transient machined ID to disk, making it persistent. For details, see below.
Use systemd-firstboot(1) to initialize the machine ID on mounted (but not booted) system images.
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
--root=root
Takes a directory path as argument. All paths operated will be prefixed with the given alternate root path, including the path for
/etc/machine-id itself.
--commit
Commit a transient machine ID to disk. This command may be used to convert a transient machine ID into a persistent one. A transient
machine ID file is one that was bind mounted from a memory file system (usually "tmpfs") to /etc/machine-id during the early phase of
the boot process. This may happen because /etc is initially read-only and was missing a valid machine ID file at that point.
This command will execute no operation if /etc/machine-id is not mounted from a memory file system, or if /etc is read-only. The
command will write the current transient machine ID to disk and unmount the /etc/machine-id mount point in a race-free manner to ensure
that this file is always valid and accessible for other processes.
This command is primarily used by the systemd-machine-id-commit.service(8) early boot service.
--print
Print the machine ID generated or committed after the operation is complete.
-h, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
--version
Print a short version string and exit.
EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.
SEE ALSO systemd(1), machine-id(5), systemd-machine-id-commit.service(8), dbus-uuidgen(1), systemd-firstboot(1)NOTES
1. Container Interface
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/ContainerInterface
systemd 237SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-SETUP(1)