Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: FSCK on veritas managed disk
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory FSCK on veritas managed disk Post 61520 by RTM on Friday 4th of February 2005 12:37:22 PM
Old 02-04-2005
Quote:
I've had a VXFS filesystem get corrupted and now it won't mount.
Bummer - I hate when that happens.
Quote:
Can I run a fsck -y on the raw disk device
It matters what you mean by 'raw disk device' - If this was a vertias filesystem that was mounted as a partition, fsck won't be a problem. If this was a veritas filesystem raw Sybase disk then fsck I believe would fail (since it's not a real filesystem but just a Sybase raw partition controlled by Veritas).
Quote:
or should something be done within veritas? Veritas does not see the disk at the moment.
Hopefully you had saved in the past the information needed (I don't recall all of it off the top of my head) -
Code:
vxprint -th 
vxdisk list

If the drive failed, then there is a procedure to follow within vxdiskadm of removing and installing - but you should have the old info to know exactly which device you are dealing with.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Veritas root disk mirroring

Hi there, My task is to replace the two 73 G disks with two 143 G disks , which has vxvm 4.1 running on it. I would like to know whether the steps iam following are correct. 1. Break the sub-disks, plexes of the root mirror. 2. Remove the sub-disks,plexes of the root mirror. 3. Remove one of... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jartan
10 Replies

2. Solaris

Need to remove a disk from Veritas

I have a bogus disk that keeps showing up as failed from vxdisk list - - disk hpdg failed was:c2t0d11s2 There isnt any c2 devices on the system: # ls /dev/dsk/c2* /dev/dsk/c2*: No such file or directory # ls /dev/rdsk/c2* /dev/rdsk/c2*: No such file or... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kiem
3 Replies

3. Solaris

Help: root partition crashed, fsck failed. Disk problem?

recently this sunfire 280R (solaris 10) is having problme, it was able to boot up, then all suddent, it failed, and I can't even mount the first disk which contains root partition when I boot up from cdrom. 2 X 36G hard drive, I scan first hard drive by "read", there is no bad block. The... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: steeles
2 Replies

4. UNIX and Linux Applications

Veritas silent disk group creation

I am trying to write a kornshell script that will automatically create veritas disk groups. However, the only utility that I can find that will create the diskgroup is vxdiskadd, which prompts with interactive questions. I've tried to pass the answers through to vxdiskadd, but I receive the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jm6601
0 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Configure disk group with veritas

People i have an a storage i create two virtual disk 1 y 2. In the virtual disk 1 i configure 8 volumes and in the Vd2 configure 5 volumes. Now i want to create a disk group called Prod2 y Dev2 but when i go to vxdiskadm and i choose add disk o encapusalte when i press list to list the disk... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: enkei17
0 Replies

6. Solaris

Veritas not attaching replaced disk

Hi, I`m on SunFire480R with Solaris 10. Disk in rootdg group failed, so it was replaced. However, I cannot make Veritas initalise the replaced disk: # vxdctl enable # vxdisk list c1t0d0s2 Device: c1t0d0s2 devicetag: c1t0d0 type: auto flags: online error private autoconfig... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: masloff
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Veritas disk group not the same on each cluster node.

Need help getting all disk devices back on node 2 the same as node 1. Recently Veritas and/or Sun cluster got wrecked on my 2 node Sun cluster after installing the latest patch cluster. I backed out the patches and then node 2 could see only half of the devices and Veritas drives (though format... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: buggin
0 Replies

8. Solaris

Disk corruption? Cant run fsck....

NOTICE: /: unexpected free inode 45262, run fsck(1M) fsck: cannot open vfstab Looks like /etc/vfstab (and a few other files has gone) Any ideas? Boot from cd, mount disk and recreate vfstab so that I can run fsck? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: psychocandy
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to extend a disk in veritas volume manager in veritas cluster?

Hi Experts, I wanted to extend a veritas file system which is running on veritas cluster and mounted on node2 system. #hastatus -sum -- System State Frozen A node1 running 0 A node2 running 0 -- Group State -- Group System Probed ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Skmanojkum
1 Replies
QUOTACHECK(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     QUOTACHECK(8)

NAME
quotacheck -- filesystem quota consistency checker SYNOPSIS
quotacheck [-g] [-u] [-v] filesystem ... quotacheck [-g] [-u] [-v] -a DESCRIPTION
Quotacheck examines each filesystem, builds a table of current disk usage, and compares this table against that recorded in the disk quota file for the filesystem. If any inconsistencies are detected, both the quota file and the current system copy of the incorrect quotas are updated (the latter only occurs if an active filesystem is checked). By default both user and group quotas are checked. Available options: -a If the -a flag is supplied in place of any filesystem names, quotacheck will check all the read-write filesystems with an existing mount option file at its root. The mount option file specifies the types of quotas that are to be checked. -g Only group quotas are checked. The mount option file, .quota.ops.group, must exist at the root of the filesystem. -u Only user quotas are checked. The mount option file, .quota.ops.user, must exist at the root of the filesystem. -v quotacheck reports discrepancies between the calculated and recorded disk quotas. Specifying both -g and -u is equivalent to the default. Parallel passes are run on the filesystems required, in an identical fashion to fsck(8). Normally quotacheck operates silently. Quotacheck expects each filesystem being checked to have quota data files named .quota.user and/or .quota.group located at the filesystem root. If a binary data file is not present, quotacheck will create it. The default filename and root location cannot be overridden. Quotacheck is normally run at fsck time. Quotacheck accesses the raw device in calculating the actual disk usage for each user. Thus, the filesystems checked should be quiescent while quotacheck is running. FILES
Each of the following quota files is located at the root of the mounted filesystem. The mount option files are empty files whose existence indicates that quotas are to be enabled for that filesystem. The binary data files will be created by quotacheck, if they don't already exist. .quota.user data file containing user quotas .quota.group data file containing group quotas .quota.ops.user mount option file used to enable user quotas .quota.ops.group mount option file used to enable group quotas SEE ALSO
quota(1), quotactl(2), edquota(8), fsck(8), quotaon(8), repquota(8) HISTORY
The quotacheck command appeared in 4.2BSD. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution October 17, 2002 4.2 Berkeley Distribution
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:25 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy