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1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hey Experts,
I'm facing an issue related to space in the unix system. I have a mount point where 9.4 T is allocated. The entire mount point is filled and I can trace only for 6.7T but I could not located the rest of the space around 2T. I tried every single command to locate the file starting... (7 Replies)
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2. Solaris
Hi Experts,
I am in direction to mirror filesystem in solaris10. Many articles I've read but not much help. Everytime I issued command metainit I always get 'there are no existing databases'. I don't know which steps I missed.
bash-3.2# metainit -f d11 1 1 c0t0d0s0
metainit: Sol10: there are... (3 Replies)
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3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I have Solaris-10 with mutiple zones running in it. My Big Brother monitoring is complaining for very less swap space available, but I am not able to find, what process has consumed its swap space and how to clear it. All zones including global server have almost blank /tmp with very less data.... (3 Replies)
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4. HP-UX
Hi,
I am not sure how many scripts / java processes running on my HP-UX server.
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5. Solaris
Hi all,
After setting up SUN cluster in two nodes, I created disksets and volumes in the servers.
Everything wwas working well and perfect.
Today, I created a diskset and added three disks to it.
When trying to create a volume, I am getting the following error:
lsun3175 /dev/rdsk->... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manojsomanath
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6. Solaris
HI All,
Recently during oracle install I realized that I did not have enough swap space.
So I -
1. Created a swap file "swap_fille1" in /rpool using mkfile -
# ls -ltr /rpool
total 10487121
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 3 Dec 21 12:09 boot
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root ... (10 Replies)
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7. Linux
Hi I have a process generating a file in Solaris. Now we have migrated the process to Linux. When we open the file in vi on solaris and hit space bar, it stops after reaching the end of line. But in linux it continues to go on the next line. So I want to know whether the difference is between the... (4 Replies)
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Ok,
I have a drive on my unix system that looks like this:
/dev/hd4 0.38 0.00 100% 4316 3% /
I can't find any file on that drive that would account for the 400MB. How can I thoroughly find the culprit of this space? I've done ls -al, but don't see anything that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bbbngowc
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9. Solaris
SunOS unknown 5.9 Generic_118558-10 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-880
I'm trying to set up mirroring and am running into a problem:
As you can see, I set up the metadb, but am getting a coredump when running metainit. I saw this through google, but don't know the validity of it. Any ideas?
#... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dangral
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10. Solaris
Hi
I have a sun machine. Recently I have upgraded. After the upgradation I get this error when I reboot the system -
metainit: <servername>: there are no existing databases
The system is a standalone system and I don't want to configure any raid on this system. Also I have not tried... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: RajaRC
1 Replies
mddb.cf(4) File Formats mddb.cf(4)
NAME
mddb.cf - metadevice state database replica locations
SYNOPSIS
/etc/lvm/mddb.cf
DESCRIPTION
The /etc/lvm/mddb.cf file is created when the metadb(1M) command is invoked. You should never directly edit this file.
The file /etc/lvm/mddb.cf is used by the metainit(1M) command to find the locations of the metadevice state databases replicas. The metadb
command creates the file and updates it each time it is run. Similar information is entered in the /kernel/drv/md.conf file.
Each metadevice state database replica has a unique entry in the /etc/lvm/mddb.cf file. Each entry contains the driver and minor unit num-
bers associated with the block physical device where a replica is stored. Each entry also contains the block number of the master block,
which contains a list of all other blocks in the replica.
Entries in the /etc/lvm/mddb.cf file are of the form: driver_name minor_t daddr_t checksum where driver_name and minor_t represent the
device number of the physical device storing this replica. daddr_t is the disk block address. checksum is used to make certain the entry
has not been corrupted. A pound sign (#) introduces a comment.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Sample File
The following example shows a mddb.cf file.
#metadevice database location file do not hand edit
#driver minor_t daddr_t device id checksum
sd 152 16 id1,sd@SSEAGATE_JDD288110MC9LH/a -2613
In the example above, the value for daddr_t indicates that the offset from the start of a given partition is 16 disk blocks from the start
of that partition.
FILES
/etc/lvm/mddb.cf
/kernel/drv/md.conf
SEE ALSO
mdmonitord(1M), metaclear(1M), metadb(1M), metadetach(1M), metahs(1M), metainit(1M), metaoffline(1M), metaonline(1M), metaparam(1M),
metarecover(1M), metarename(1M), metareplace(1M), metaroot(1M), metassist(1M), metaset(1M), metastat(1M), metasync(1M), metattach(1M),
md.cf(4), md.tab(4), attributes(5), md(7D)
Solaris Volume Manager Administration Guide
SunOS 5.10 8 Aug 2003 mddb.cf(4)