10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
getStatusi86()
{
#storing logical volume name
volumelist=`cfgadm -val | grep "Logical Volume" | awk '{print substr($1,9,14)}'`
controller=`echo $volumelist | awk '{print substr($1,2,1)}'`
#errordisk=""
volume1=`echo $volumelist | awk '{print $1}'`
for volume in $volumelist
do... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: frintocf
1 Replies
2. Solaris
I tried using raidctl earlier today to use my 2 disks in a RAID1 setup and I totally destroyed my OS install. I'm sure I did something funky and it freaked out. No big deal...right?
This is what I was seeing after a reboot.
I decided to just reinstall the OS. It let me go through all of... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kingdbag
3 Replies
3. Solaris
I have boot disk mirrored using hardware raid i.e raidctl command.
If I want to place an order for a spare drive and keep it at our location for spare, how do I find the disk specification since #format does not reveal this.
The server is T2000 running Solaris 10.
Any help please. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tirmazi
5 Replies
4. Solaris
using the internal 2 drives mirror was created using raidctl on 100's of our servers . sometime when one drive fails we dont face any issue & we replace the drive with out any problem . but sometimes when one drive fails , system becomes unresponsive and doesnot allow us to login , the only way to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: skamal4u
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello people i have a question, when i put raidctl -l on sun fire show this
Volume Size Stripe Status Cache RAID
Sub Size Level
Disk ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: enkei17
0 Replies
6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello World:
Recently I ran into an issue where a collegue had installed a Sun T5140 with twin 136GB disks in them. However, he forgot to execute the raidctl command first to mirror c1t0d0 to c1t1d0 boo hoo:) So along I come and try to mirror the disks by booting to sigle user... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rambo15
1 Replies
7. Solaris
Setting up a T5240 with two disks c1t0d0 and c1t1d0.
I am trying to use raidctl but when I issue.
raidctl -l
I get
Controller 1
Disk: 0.0.0
Disk: 0.1.0
So I try
raidctl -c '0.0.0 0.1.0' -r 1 1
and I get "Array in use."
I try (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: photon
4 Replies
8. Solaris
At my own eys I can see 4 disks inside of server. Previous admin told me that hardware mirror is done.
What I see with "format" is 2 disks - I suspect that these are 2 MIRRORS.
I just cant be sure because raidctl show this:
# raidctl -l c0t0d0
Volume Size Stripe ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: czezz
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I am mirroring a single partition drive with raidctl. The source partition was mounted when I created the mirror with raidctl -c c1t1d0 c1t3d0. The source disk was defined with s2 and s6 only.
I didn't think to umount it first.
Is there a problem with that? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: csgonan
2 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I am using raidctl on a v440 disk and noticed it resyncs after every boot, which takes about 30 minutes because of the size of the partition. I am concerned with what happens during the resync if "writes" happen to the disk before it is complete?
Any info would be helpful.
Thanks (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: csgonan
0 Replies
APT-MIRROR(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation APT-MIRROR(1)
NAME
apt-mirror - apt sources mirroring tool
SYNOPSIS
apt-mirror [configfile]
DESCRIPTION
A small and efficient tool that lets you mirror a part of or the whole Debian GNU/Linux distribution or any other apt sources.
Main features:
* It uses a config similar to apts sources.list
* It's fully pool comply
* It supports multithreaded downloading
* It supports multiple architectures at the same time
* It can automatically remove unneeded files
* It works well on overloaded channel to internet
* It never produces an inconsistent mirror including while mirroring
* It works on all POSIX compliant systems with perl and wget
COMMENTS
apt-mirror uses /etc/apt/mirror.list as a configuration file. By default it is tuned to official Debian or Ubuntu mirrors. Change it for
your needs.
After you setup the configuration file you may run as root:
# su - apt-mirror -c apt-mirror
Or uncomment line in /etc/cron.d/apt-mirror to enable daily mirror updates.
FILES
/etc/apt/mirror.list
Main configuration file
/etc/cron.d/apt-mirror
Cron configuration template
/var/spool/apt-mirror/mirror
Mirror places here
/var/spool/apt-mirror/skel
Place for temporarily downloaded indexes
/var/spool/apt-mirror/var
Log files placed here. URLs and MD5 summs also here.
CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES
The mirror.list configuration supports many options, the file is well commented explinging each option. here are some sample mirror
configuration lines showing the various supported ways :
Normal: deb http://example.com/debian stable main contrib non-free
Arch Specific: ( many other arch's are supported ) deb-powerpc http://example.com/debian stable main contrib non-free
HTTP and FTP Auth or non-standard port: deb http://user:pass@example.com:8080/debian stable main contrib non-free
Source Mirroring: deb-src http://example.com/debian stable main contrib non-free
ORIGINAL AUTHOR
Dmitry N. Hramtsov <hdn@nsu.ru>
CURRENT AUTHORS
Dmitry N. Hramtsov <hdn@nsu.ru> Brandon Holtsclaw <me@brandonholtsclaw.com>
perl v5.14.2 2012-01-28 APT-MIRROR(1)