10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hi All,
Recently I came to know my / root file system is getting full because of application directory /siebel/
I have one option.
1) Down the application , take full backup
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2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
I need to mount an nfs filesystem as below.
xxx.xx.xx.xxx:/media/nss/Rocky Catherine/logs
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Could anyone help me please as I am stuck up.
I want to mount /home/dun/maitree location of server A in server B to location /home/dun/tibco .Both server A and server B are Linux machine .The problem is that /home/dun/tibco of server B has some files and directory in it so after doing this... (1 Reply)
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4. Solaris
Hi techies,
I am pretty new to Solaris. So the qstn might be a silly one.
I had a local disk with Solaris installed.
I have done ufsdump to a SAN disk and after that s3 and s7 slices are giving the following error : "UNEXPECTED INCONSISTENCY; RUN fsck MANUALLY."
I had the following... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manojsomanath
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5. Red Hat
i am new to linux i want to know how to create ntfs partition and mount all windows drives in linux
please help me (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunkmohan18
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6. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Hello,
In a shared storage environment is their anything to stop being able to mount the same filesystem on two hosts by accident, a flag being set or something on the storage?
If it did happen would one of the hosts panic? (2 Replies)
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
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8. Solaris
Hi all,
I have a question regarding filesystem mounting.
I have one Sun box(V240) and a NAS on a network. Sun machine shows the following output of df -k command.
# df -k
Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
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9. Red Hat
I'm currently running dual boot Linux & Windows. Linux is Fedora core 3. I've downloaded and installed the rmp that was needed so that I could mount a NTFS filesystem. But when I go to mount the filesystem I'm still getting error's stating it does not support the NTFS filesystem.
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10. BSD
I get error that I have to rund fsck manually on my filesystem, but when I go to run fsck on filesystem ad1s1e I get an error that says can't open device not configured so fsck won't rund on that filesystem. I am only booting up in single user mode. I noticed when I look in the fstab file the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rbizzell
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ISCSICTL(8) BSD System Manager's Manual ISCSICTL(8)
NAME
iscsictl -- iSCSI initiator management utility
SYNOPSIS
iscsictl -A -p portal -t target [-u user -s secret]
iscsictl -A -d discovery-host [-u user -s secret]
iscsictl -A -a [-c path]
iscsictl -A -n nickname [-c path]
iscsictl -M -i session-id [-p portal] [-t target] [-u user] [-s secret]
iscsictl -M -i session-id [-n nickname [-c path]]
iscsictl -R [-p portal] [-t target]
iscsictl -R -a
iscsictl -R -n nickname [-c path]
iscsictl -L [-v]
DESCRIPTION
The iscsictl utility is used to configure the iSCSI initiator.
The following options are available:
-A Add session.
-M Modify session.
-R Remove session.
-L List sessions.
-a When adding, add all sessions defined in the configuration file. When removing, remove all currently established sessions.
-c Path to the configuration file. The default is /etc/iscsi.conf.
-d Target host name or address used for SendTargets discovery. When used, it will add a temporary discovery session. After discovery is
done, sessions will be added for each discovered target, and the temporary discovery session will be removed.
-i Session ID, as displayed by iscsictl -v.
-n The "nickname" of session defined in the configuration file.
-p Target portal - host name or address - for statically defined targets.
-s CHAP secret.
-t Target name.
-u CHAP login.
-v Verbose mode.
Certain parameters are necessary when adding a session. One can specify these either via command line (using the -t, -p, -u, and -s
options), or configuration file (using the -a or -n options). Some functionality - for example mutual CHAP - is available only via configu-
ration file.
Since connecting to the target is performed in background, non-zero exit status does not mean that the session was successfully established.
Use iscsictl -L to check the connection status.
Note that in order for the iSCSI initiator to be able to connect to a target, the iscsid(8) daemon must be running.
Also note that FreeBSD currently supports two different initiators: the old one, iscsi_initiator(4), with its control utility iscontrol(8),
and the new one, iscsi(4), with iscsictl and iscsid(8). The only thing the two have in common is the configuration file, iscsi.conf(5).
FILES
/etc/iscsi.conf iSCSI initiator configuration file.
EXIT STATUS
The iscsictl utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
Attach to target iqn.2012-06.com.example:target0, served by 192.168.1.1:
iscsictl -A -t iqn.2012-06.com.example:target0 -p 192.168.1.1
Disconnect all iSCSI sessions:
iscsictl -Ra
SEE ALSO
iscsi(4), iscsi.conf(5), iscsid(8)
HISTORY
The iscsictl command appeared in FreeBSD 10.0.
AUTHORS
The iscsictl utility was developed by Edward Tomasz Napierala <trasz@FreeBSD.org> under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation.
BSD
September 12, 2014 BSD