10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Hardware
Hi everyone,
I have an external hard drive and I accidentally deleted the partition table.
Can I restore my files?
If I try to run the f-disk command this is what it says
Disk /dev/sda: 320.1 GB, 320072933376 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 38913 cylinders, total 625142448 sectors
Units =... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Sampa
1 Replies
2. Red Hat
How to check whether the disk in linux machine are internal or external ( from nas or san). How to identify internal(local) and external disks. Following are some details of my server. Thanks.
#df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda3 15G 3.5G 10G... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: salmanraza
2 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi all.
Can i install RHEl5 in a external hard disk, work on lenovo T60 laptop.
Plz reply me. Tell me the process. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nagaraju.kappal
2 Replies
4. Hardware
I have a external HD that I can't seem to open. When I try to open it with gparted it says unrecognized disk. When I run gparted from the terminal this is what it says.
~ $ sudo gparted
======================
libparted : 2.2
======================
/dev/sdb: unrecognised disk label
When I... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
18 Replies
5. Linux
Hi,
I connected a external hard disk to my linux machine(Redhat 5) and shared the external hard disk by using NFS. The problem is hard disk becoming read-only file system after some time, could some one please tell me the reason for it.
I created two partitions with ext3 filesystem in... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: ktrimu
10 Replies
6. AIX
I installed new internal disks in my p570. They will be part of a new AIX vg. Unfortunately, we have Veritas Volume Manager running on this AIX 5.2 ml 10 box. Veritas has grabbed control of the disks. I want AIX LVM to control the disks.
I cannot get these disks free of Veritas:
<lspv... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BobSmith
2 Replies
7. Solaris
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated. I have read other threads on similar subject but still not clear on what this is telling me and what action to take. Do I have a couple of disks that are slowly dying?
While checking disk usage on the V880 I noticed the following:
# format... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jamba1
3 Replies
8. SuSE
Hi,
I am running Suse on a fujitsu server. The problem is that it will no fully load the usb external disk. When plugged in, dmesg shows that indeed a usb disk has been plugged in ,but gives no devpath e.g sda,sdb.
lsusb shows the disk vendor (western digital) but nothing else.Whats goin on... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ulemsee
2 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all
I had started to learn how to backup disk to disk to tape method
Firstly I had backup to my NAS
tar czvf /MyNetworkStorge/backup.tar /home
Secondly I using dd command to copy the tar to tape
dd if=/MyNetworkStorge/backup.tar of=/dev/tape0
But the tape drive always hang.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lijiajin
5 Replies
10. HP-UX
Hi,
I have an HP RX4640 running HP-UX 11iv3 with two internal disks and its connected to a HP disk system 2400 with fibre cable.
If the storage system is online before the server is on then the server can't find the disks. And I get the following error messages:
vgchange: Warning: Couldn't... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hoff
3 Replies
iostat(1) General Commands Manual iostat(1)
Name
iostat - report I/O statistics
Syntax
iostat [ -c ] [ -t ] [ disknames ] [ interval ] [ count ]
Description
The command reports I/O statistics for terminals, disks and cpus. For terminals the number of input and output characters are counted.
For disks the number of 512 byte blocks per second and number of transfers per second are displayed. For cpus, it provides the percentage
of time the system has spent in user mode, in user mode running low priority (niced) processes, in system mode, and idling. On multipro-
cessor systems these cpu statistics represent a cumulative summary of all the cpus.
The optional disknames argument causes disk statistics to be displayed for the specified disks. If this argument is not specified then
disk statistics will be displayed for the first 3 disks only.
The optional interval argument causes to report once each interval seconds. The first report is for all time since a reboot and each sub-
sequent report is for the last interval only.
The optional count argument restricts the number of reports.
Options
-c Displays the percentage of time each cpu spent in user mode, running low priority (nice'd) processes, in system mode, and idling.
-t Displays the number of characters read from and written to terminals.
Examples
This example will cause cpu and disk statistics for the 5 disks ra0, ra1, ra2, ra3, and ra4.
iostat ra0 ra1 ra2 ra3 ra4
This example will cause cpu, terminal, and disk statistics for ra0 to be displayed and updated every 2 seconds.
iostat -t ra0 2
Files
See Also
vmstat(1), cpustat(1)
iostat(1)