Thanks to all, I got the required info.


rgds,

raja
--

On Thu, 23 Aug 2001 01:00:31  
 Jonathan Lewis wrote:
>
>A logical volume is not necessarily associated with
>a single disc as in most cases people tend to
>mirror/stripe a volume group across many disks
>before creating logical volumes in the volume
>group.
>
>However, if you execute
>    vgdisplay -v /dev/vg00
>
>then the tail end of the report will show you the
>list of physical volumes (i.e. discs) associated
>with the volume group.
>
>   PV Name                     /dev/dsk/c0t5d0
>   PV Status                   available
>   Total PE                    2169
>   Free PE                     1328
>   Autoswitch                  On
>
>You will also get a list of the logical volumes
>in the volume group
>
>   LV Name                     /dev/vg00/lvol3
>   LV Status                   available/syncd
>   LV Size (Mbytes)            140
>   Current LE                  35
>   Allocated PE                35
>   Used PV                     1
>
>
>If you want to track down extreme levels of detail,
>you can issue:
>    lvdisplay -v /dev/vg00/lvol3
>
>Amongst other things, this will tell you how much
>of that logical volume is on each physical volume
>of the volume group
>
>   --- Distribution of logical volume ---
>   PV Name            LE on PV  PE on PV
>   /dev/dsk/c0t5d0    35        35
>
>  --- Logical extents ---
>   LE    PV1                PE1   Status 1
>   00000 /dev/dsk/c0t5d0    00277 current
>   00001 /dev/dsk/c0t5d0    00278 current
>   00002 /dev/dsk/c0t5d0    00279 current
>
>
>
>Jonathan Lewis
>
>Host to The Co-Operative Oracle Users' FAQ
>http://www.jlcomp.demon.co.uk/faq/ind_faq.html
>
>Author of:
>Practical Oracle 8i: Building Efficient Databases
>See http://www.jlcomp.demon.co.uk/book_rev.html
>
>For latest news of public appearances
>See http://www.jlcomp.demon.co.uk
>
>Screen saver or Life saver: http://www.ud.com
>Use spare CPU to assist in cancer research.
>
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Date: 23 August 2001 05:03
>
>
>|Hello all,
>|
>|If I want to know from the unix system point of view, which disk is
>being bombarded by a particular data file, how do I come to know. I
>have used the mount command but that gives me the logical volume, but
>does not give the disk name that it is hitting.
>|
>|This is on hp11. I can come to know from the mount command that
>oracle datafiles are on /dev/vg00/lvol3
>|
>|But I want to know which disk does /dev/vg00/lvol3 hit? whether it
>hits disk c1t2d0 or c2t2d0 ?
>|
>|Any unix guru can tell me what command to see apart from mount which
>I have used?
>|
>|thanks.
>|
>|raja
>|
>
>
>-- 
>Please see the official ORACLE-L FAQ: http://www.orafaq.com
>-- 
>Author: Jonathan Lewis
>  INET: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
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