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Full Discussion: Mirrored disk.....
Operating Systems AIX Mirrored disk..... Post 93879 by aixteam on Friday 23rd of December 2005 01:11:51 AM
Old 12-23-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by balaji_prk
How do I know, which all disks are mirrored? any command?

Bala
when u give lsvg -l rootvg u can find whether the FS is mirrored ....
lsvg -l rootvg
rootvg:
LV NAME TYPE LPs PPs PVs LV STATE MOUNT POINT
hd5 boot 1 2 2 closed/syncd N/A
hd6 paging 141 282 2 open/syncd N/A

then if u give lsvg -p rootvg ,it gives what r all the disk r belong to VG,
lsvg -p rootvg
rootvg:
PV_NAME PV STATE TOTAL PPs FREE PPs FREE DISTRIBUTION
hdisk1 active 542 1 00..00..00..00..01
hdisk2 active 542 1 00..00..00..00..01

still if u want to know more in which hdisk and which pv here is the command,conclusion that Hdisk2 is the mirror of hdisk1

lslv -m hd1
hd1:/home
LP PP1 PV1 PP2 PV2 PP3 PV3
0001 0041 hdisk1 0041 hdisk2
 

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FREE(9r)																  FREE(9r)

NAME
FREE - General: Deallocates (frees) the allocated kernel virtual memory SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/malloc.h> FREE( void *addr, int type ); ARGUMENTS
Specifies the memory pointer that points to the allocated memory to be freed. You must have previously set this pointer in the call to MAL- LOC. You also define the data type for this argument in the call to MALLOC. Specifies the purpose for which the memory is being allocated. The memory types are defined in the file <malloc.h>. Typically, kernel modules use the constant M_DEVBUF to indicate that kernel module memory is being allocated (or freed). DESCRIPTION
The FREE routine deallocates (frees) the allocated kernel virtual memory, which you allocated in a previous call to MALLOC. NOTES
A memory corruption can occur if a kernel module continues to use the memory after freeing it. The operating system provides a built-in mechanism to debug such erroneous use of memory. You can enable this debugging feature at boot time by providing the following boot parame- ter: kmem_debug=1. When you enable this debugging feature, the FREE routine stores the following in the last word of freed memory: The pro- gram counter (pc) of the module that last freed the memory The checksum of the memory content The MALLOC routine checks the checksum of the memory content before reallocating this corrupted memory. If the checksum of the memory con- tent does not match the corrupted memory, MALLOC stores the debug information and then causes the kernel to panic. The MALLOC routine stores the address and size of the corrupted memory and the pc of the routine that last freed it in a kmem_corrupt_data structure. You should consider the following when using this debugging feature: This debugging feature does not detect cases where the corruption occurs after malloc reallocates the freed memory to some other module. There is a small chance that the pc of the routine that freed the memory (stored in the last word of freed memory) may itself become corrupted. RETURN VALUES
None SEE ALSO
Routines: MALLOC(9r) FREE(9r)
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