Thanks for finding that but, as you said, it doesn't help much. The disk filled to 100% due to DB2 taking dumps but that doesn't tell me what caused the dumping in the first place.
We are still running Dell full diagnostics (started yesterday afternoon and was at 78% as of 2pm EDT). My OS guy is watching the pot boil and will report back once it finishes. Then it that is clean, he will wipe it and reinstall RH 6, since it doesn't look like what is left (/TSMDB, /TSMLOG, /TSMARCHLOG) will be of any value without the root filesystem. On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 1:49 PM, Skylar Thompson <[email protected]>wrote: > Encapsulating the term in quotes ("-980") ought to do the trick. Looks like > -980 is associated with a disk error, which unfortunately doesn't help > Zoltan too much at this point... > > > http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/db2luw/v8/index.jsp?topic=/com.ibm.db2.udb.doc/core/rsql0900.htm > > On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 01:43:50PM -0400, Thomas Denier wrote: > > Google would normally treat a minus sign as a request for Web pages > > not containing a specific word, so that a search for 'sqlcode -980' > > would find pages containing 'sqlcode' but not '980' (with or without > > a preceding sign). I don't know whether there is a way to have a > > minus sign treated as part of a search term. > > > > Thomas Denier > > Thomas Jefferson University Hospital > > -- > -- Skylar Thompson ([email protected]) > -- Genome Sciences Department, System Administrator > -- Foege Building S046, (206)-685-7354 > -- University of Washington School of Medicine > -- *Zoltan Forray* TSM Software & Hardware Administrator Virginia Commonwealth University UCC/Office of Technology Services [email protected] - 804-828-4807 Don't be a phishing victim - VCU and other reputable organizations will never use email to request that you reply with your password, social security number or confidential personal information. For more details visit http://infosecurity.vcu.edu/phishing.html
