That really worked! Thanks a lot!!
Eckhard -- Am Montag, 14. Juni 2004 16:17 schrieb John L. Singleton: > Eckhard, > > A full data volume is not a catastrophic situation. To handle this, you > only need to create more data volumes. Once you create more data > volumes, the data will be distributed evenly among the volumes. > > To do this with dbmcli, for example: > > dbmcli -d <dbname> -u <DBMUSER,DBMPASS> > > Then use the command, db_addvolume. > > db_addvolume DATA <vol_name> <media_type> <size_in_8192_byte_pages> > > So for example, to create a second data volume, with a file-based medium > of 200 MB: > > db_addvolume DATA DAT_0002 F 24414 > > It's a good idea, however, to make your new volumes the same size as > your old ones. > > Hope that helps, cheers, > > JLS > > > +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ > > | Liked my post? Then you're sure to love my book on MaxDB. | > | You can signup to be notified when my book is available at: | > | > | http://www.johnsingleton.com/maxdb/signup.html | > | > | And you can read my semi-regular column on MaxDB at: | > | > | http://www.johnsingleton.com/maxdb/ | > > +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ > > Eckhard Jost wrote: > >Hello, > > > >does anyone know what to do if a data volume is to 100% full. Is it dead > > or is there a chance to rescue it? > > > >Greetings > >Eckhard -- ------------------- Message Mobile Dipl.-Kfm. / M.R.F. Eckhard Jost Software Consultant -- MaxDB Discussion Mailing List For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/maxdb To unsubscribe: http://lists.mysql.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]
