10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Red Hat
Hi guys,
thanks for helping out.
If you have two boot disk mirrored and your primary boot disk fails, how will you boot the system from the second disk?
Thank you very much for your assistance on this matter.
Arrey (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cjashu
5 Replies
2. Solaris
I have a v480 with a mirrored boot disk c1t0 and c1t1. The drives themselves don't show a failure but the mirror's need maintenance.
This is my plan for replacing the drive. I would love feedback to point out what I"m missing or where my steps are incorrect.
Two things I believe I'm... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pcoffey
3 Replies
3. Solaris
So I have mirrored disk already set up from c1t0d0 to c1t1d0. Is there some special procedures that I need to do before I do and then try to boot from the mirrored disk? I am using a V490 if that helps... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: drew_1980
7 Replies
4. Solaris
# metastat
d1: Mirror
Submirror 0: d11
State: Okay
Submirror 1: d12
State: Okay
Pass: 1
Read option: roundrobin (default)
Write option: parallel (default)
Size: 14582208 blocks (7.0 GB)
d11: Submirror of d1
State: Okay
Size: 14582208 blocks... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Exposure
2 Replies
5. HP-UX
Hello All,
Am trynig to identify if the local HD's on our BL860 (running 11v3) are indeed mirrored to each other.
Cheers,
Cameron (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Cameron
3 Replies
6. Solaris
We use SW mirroring (RAID1) using SVM for our SUN servers (which we OEM to end clients with our application on). When I need to make a tape backup for the server (disk), I disable mirroring and perform backup of the entire disk to tape using ufsdump. This process requires an outage and sensitive as... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: StarSol
8 Replies
7. Solaris
Hi, Im getting a downtime of 4 hrs to do porting of bootdisks.
Currently, the system is running on Sf4800. 2 internal disk 36G connected to a SE3510 storage.
We're getting 72G disks and we want to restore the OS from the current 36G to the 72G disk. System is under veritas volume manager ctrl.... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: incredible
4 Replies
8. Solaris
Hi guys,
I havent done this before but iam trying to create an image of a mirrorred drive.
Correct me if iam wrong, but when i have two disks setup in raid configuration and have them mirrored in solaris. It then defines at one entity.
How would i create a "flar" image of that one entity... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tlee
3 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
What is the correct mkfs syntax to create mirrored disk files systems? I need to make the file system 20gb. For example:
machine# mkfs -F ufs /dev/md/dsk/d40
size not specified
ufs usage: mkfs special size(sectors) \
-m : dump fs cmd line used to make this partition
-V : print this... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: GLJ@USC
4 Replies
10. AIX
I have AIX 5.1
I ran these commands and was not able to see what disk were mirrored to what. I thought this is what I should do?
lslv -m rd |more
lslv -m db |more
I get a error stating that it can't find or in the device configuation databse.
Is there another way to look? I have a physcal... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rocker40
1 Replies
vxbootsetup(1M) vxbootsetup(1M)
NAME
vxbootsetup - set up system boot information on a Veritas Volume Manager disk
SYNOPSIS
/etc/vx/bin/vxbootsetup [-g diskgroup] [medianame ... ]
DESCRIPTION
The vxbootsetup utility configures physical disks so that they can be used to boot the system. Before vxbootsetup is called to configure a
disk, the required volumes, standvol, rootvol and swapvol (and optionally, dumpvol) must be created on the disk. All of these volumes must
be contiguous with only one subdisk.
The -g option may be used to specify the boot disk group.
If no medianame arguments are specified, all disks that contain usable mirrors of the root, swap, /usr and /var volumes are configured to
be bootable.
If medianame arguments are given, only the disks that are associated with the specified disk names are configured to be bootable.
vxbootsetup requires that:
o The root volume must be named rootvol and must have a usage type of root.
o The swap volume must be named swapvol and must have a usage type of swap.
o The volumes containing /usr and /var (if any) must be named usr and var, respectively.
See the chapter "Recovery from Boot Disk Failure" in the Veritas Volume Manager Troubleshooting Guide for detailed information on how the
system boots and how VxVM impacts the system boot process. The vxmirror, vxrootmir, and vxresize utilities call vxbootsetup automatically.
If you use vxassist, or vxmake and vxplex to create mirrors of the root volume on a disk, you must run vxbootsetup explicitly to make the
disk bootable.
ARGUMENTS
medianame
Specifies the disk name (disk media name) of a VM disk that is to be configured as bootable.
SEE ALSO
disksetup(1M), edvtoc(1M), vxassist(1M), vxevac(1M), vxinstall(1M), vxintro(1M), vxmake(1M), vxmirror(1M), vxplex(1M), vxresize(1M),
vxrootmir(1M)
Veritas Volume Manager Troubleshooting Guide
VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vxbootsetup(1M)