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Full Discussion: Backup / restore
Operating Systems Solaris Backup / restore Post 79401 by mhm4 on Wednesday 27th of July 2005 03:39:31 PM
Old 07-27-2005
There is no such thing as a logical and physical partitions in Solaris. I think you may mean partitions and volumes. In that case, remember that volume management systems store volume/disk group specific data in private regions of the disk and spreads copies of it accross disks for redundancy. It is important to backup your volume configuration data and your system/applicaiton data. If you are not runing a volume manager then you can just rely on ufsdump.

If you lose your vol config data (pretty hard since it is spread across multiple disks), you will not be able to recreate your volumes on a replacement disk and you will have to recite thrm from memory.

Question 2: Commands differ with different vol managers VXvm uses vxprint Disk Suite uses metastat.

Q3: read up on ufsrestore
 

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

NAME
vgreduce - reduce a volume group SYNOPSIS
vgreduce [-a|--all] [-A|--autobackup y|n] [-d|--debug] [-h|-?|--help] [--removemissing] [-t|--test] [-v|--verbose] VolumeGroupName [Physi- calVolumePath...] DESCRIPTION
vgreduce allows you to remove one or more unused physical volumes from a volume group. OPTIONS
See lvm for common options. -a, --all Removes all empty physical volumes if none are given on command line. --removemissing Removes all missing physical volumes from the volume group, if there are no logical volumes allocated on those. This resumes normal operation of the volume group (new logical volumes may again be created, changed and so on). If this is not possible (there are logical volumes referencing the missing physical volumes) and you cannot or do not want to remove them manually, you can run this option with --force to have vgreduce remove any partial LVs. Any logical volumes and dependent snapshots that were partly on the missing disks get removed completely. This includes those parts that lie on disks that are still present. If your logical volumes spanned several disks including the ones that are lost, you might want to try to salvage data first by acti- vating your logical volumes with --partial as described in lvm (8). SEE ALSO
lvm(8), vgextend(8) Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.95(2) (2012-03-06) VGREDUCE(8)
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