10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. IP Networking
If Freebsd DNS server that served 100 people is crashed. How to move this 100 people to a new FreeBSD DNS server as quickly as possible? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: AIX_30
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2. Solaris
Hi Admins,
In my local Vmware system i have installed solaris but while getting my root disk mirrored in svm I changed the vfstab entries and rebooted the server , the server got crashed, and now the root file systems and other filesystems are crashed.
Please help me in recovering this. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Laxxi
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3. Red Hat
What do you check????
Thanks!
JC (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: 300zxmuro
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4. Solaris
My system is SUN Solaris 5.6 and one of the disks on the server got crashed. Here are the details
d23: Mirror
Submirror 0: d24
State: Okay
Submirror 1: d25
State: Okay
Pass: 1
Read option: roundrobin (default)
Write option: parallel (default)
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: asalman.qazi
1 Replies
5. Linux
Hello,
Iam a running a apache webserver in CentOS and i get a heavy traffic about 2.5 lac pageviews daily and my db size is about 2GB. Now the problem is after serving some lacs of requests by apache....Both apache and mysql hangouts and the system gets hanged up...using all resources in the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dheeraj4uuu
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6. SuSE
Hi,
Running SLES 9 (update 4) on dell's poweredge 1950 server.
Kernel: 2.6.5-7.315-smp #1 SMP Wed Nov 26 13:03:18 UTC 2008 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
Yesterday night my monitoring service emailed me system(ssh/smtp) unreachable...I tried connection through ssh, it did not let me through... (0 Replies)
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7. Solaris
During system startup the following warnings are appear.
Warning: /pci@8, 700000/scsi@6, 1 (g1m1)
Connected command timeout for target 9.0
Warning: /pci@8, 700000/scsi@6, 1 (g1m1)
Target 9 reducing sync, transfer rate
Warning: /pci@8, 700000/scsi@6, 1... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: tabreaz
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8. AIX
My AIX 5.3 Machine Carshed
Can any one tell some way to find out what went wrong..
I mean debug why it got creahed... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pbsrinivas
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9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello
We had an old system designed in fortran that ran on a IBM RS6000 AIX 3.2 system. The person who designed is long gone. It was replaced with a completely different (non unix) system 6 years ago. We still used it for historical lookups of older information. Well yesterday it died. The... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: billfaith
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10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
We have a problem where we get a fair few users either exiting incorrectly or crashing. I'm trying to get a script together that runs every hour to kill these processes off.
We are running Sco OperServer(TM) Release 5
The command we use to get a list of users who have crashed:
ps... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tez
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rmtab(5nfs) rmtab(5nfs)
Name
rmtab - table of local file systems mounted by remote NFS clients
Description
The file resides in the directory and contains a list of all remote hosts that have mounted local file systems using the NFS protocols.
Whenever a client performs a remote mount, the server machine's mount daemon makes an entry in the server machine's file. The command
instructs the server's mount daemon to remove the entry. The -b command broadcasts to all servers and informs them that they should remove
all entries from created by the sender of the broadcast message. By placing a -b command in tables on NFS servers can be purged of entries
made by a crashed client, who, upon rebooting, did not remount the same file systems that it had before the system crashed. The file is a
series of lines of the form:
hostname:directory
Rather than rewrite the rmtab file on each request, the mount daemon comments out unmounted entries by placing a number sign (#) in the
first character position of the appropriate line. The mount daemon rewrites the entire file, without commented out entries, no more fre-
quently than every 30 minutes. The frequency depends on the occurrence of requests.
This table is used only to preserve information between crashes and is read only by when it starts up. The daemon keeps an in-core table,
which it uses to handle requests from programs like and
Restrictions
Although the table is close to the truth, it may contain erroneous information if NFS client machines fail to execute -a when they reboot.
Files
See Also
mount(8nfs), umount(8nfs), mountd(8nfs), showmount(8nfs), shutdown(8)
rmtab(5nfs)