Well I don't know what I missed doing the LVM manually. But I removed the
LVM dasd from fstab so that I could boot cleanly.
Then using yast I recreated the LVM vg lv. Reboot and it all works fine.
I tried to reproduce the problem and noticed that yast adds 2 symlinks
Do a find /etc -type f -mtime -1 to see what files have been changed in the
last 24 hours, and compare the list of those files, and their contents to
what you did manually.
I often use backups to find changes:
1. Make a full backup
2. Do the thing
3. Make an incremental backup and see which
On 04/08/2009 07:25 PM, Saul Thersites wrote:
Ok that mounted /sys. The only file under /sys/devices/qeth/ is uevent. Keep
That is correct, since this directory only contains ccwgroup devices,
i.e. ccw devices which have already been grouped to form a qeth device.
Grouping has to be done
I think I need somebody to look over my shoulder. I just built a new server and
cannot get the hipersockets to come online. They are working just fine on the
one one other server I have them setup on using addresses 7104-7106.
They are define in HCD as:
7100,48 IQD
In user direct:
DEDICATE
What does lsqeth tell you?
What do you have in /etc/sysconfig/hardware?
Mine is hwcfg-hsi-bus-ccw-0.0
CCW_CHAN_IDS='0.0.0c03 0.0.0c04 0.0.0c05'
CCW_CHAN_MODE=''
CCW_CHAN_NUM='3'
LCS_LANCMD_TIMEOUT=''
MODULE='qeth'
MODULE_OPTIONS=''
QETH_IPA_TAKEOVER='0'
QETH_LAYER2_SUPPORT='0'
QETH_OPTIONS=''
Also try whether hwup of the device helps to get it online.
On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 4:39 PM, Harder, Pieter
pieter.har...@brabantwater.nl wrote:
MODULE='qeth'
That one finally turned out for me to be missing... after I have
tried dozens of bizarre things with Mark Post at the strangest moments
The second quarter meeting of the Chicago Area VM (and Linux)
Enthusiasts will be held on Thursday, April 23, 2009.
--
Meeting Location:
This quarter's meeting will be held at the Hewitt Associates 'East
Campus' located at 100 Half Day Road, in Lincolnshire, IL. We will
meet in the
Seems Redhat doesn't have 'hwup' or /etc/sysconfig/hardware however the
'lsqeth' did not know about the hipersocket addresses.
So I added them dynamically:
cd /sys/bus/ccwgroup/drivers/qeth
echo 0.0.710c,0.0.710d,0.0.710e group
cd 0.0.710c
echo 1 online
ifup hsi0
and it worked.
I noticed
On Thu, 9 Apr 2009 13:18:03 -0400
Bauer, Bobby (NIH/CIT) [E] baue...@mail.nih.gov wrote:
Seems Redhat doesn't have 'hwup' or /etc/sysconfig/hardware however the
'lsqeth' did not know about the hipersocket addresses.
Red Hat equivalent is ifup and I would guess that
Use a URI of lpd://host/queue when you define the printer. If that doesn't
work, then there is some firewall issue (that's the same method as your z/OS
system uses). Remember, CUPS defaults to IPP unless told otherwise, and not
all printers, especially older ones, understand IPP.
On 4/8/09 4:11
On Thu, 2009-04-09 at 13:18 -0400, Bauer, Bobby (NIH/CIT) [E] wrote:
echo 0.0.710c,0.0.710d,0.0.710e group
On Thu, 2009-04-09 at 10:34 -0400, Bauer, Bobby (NIH/CIT) [E] wrote:
SUBCHANNELS=0.0.710C,0.0.710D,0.0.710E
You should change SUBCHANNELS value to lowercase:
I am out of the office until 04/10/2009.
I will be away from my email for the day. If there is an urgent matter,
please call me on my cell phone (678) 895-6340.
Note: This is an automated response to your message Re: Hipersockets on
Redhat sent on 4/9/09 13:18:03.
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