HI
does any body has procedurefor breaking the rootdg mirror and
remirroring the same through coammnd line .
Regards
Bharat Rohera
On 8/3/07, Doug Hughes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Biju Krishnan wrote:
> > Hi doug and members,
> >
> > Say if I support a environment remotely and I need to kee
Hello,
After a short connection loss at the SAN I got some write errors and
this:
dg cd_data01dg default default 11175087864.68.mdr-cadmium
dm cd_data01dg01 c3t50001FE15005E90Dd9s2 auto 65536 629047040 NOHOTUSE
dm cd_data01dg02 c3t50001FE15005E90Cd8s2 auto 65536 20961664
bharat rohera wrote:
> HI
>
> does any body has procedurefor breaking the rootdg mirror and
> remirroring the same through coammnd line .
>
>
It can be as simple as vxplex det followed by vxplex att
what are you trying to accomplish?
___
Veritas-v
> After a short connection loss at the SAN I got some write errors and
> this:
>
> dg cd_data01dg default default 11175087864.68.mdr-cadmium
>
> dm cd_data01dg01 c3t50001FE15005E90Dd9s2 auto 65536 629047040 NOHOTUSE
> dm cd_data01dg02 c3t50001FE15005E90Cd8s2 auto 65536 209616640 FA
If this is from a short SAN issue, then you can just clear the FAILING flag
using vxedit, as documented in the VERITAS Volume Manager Troubleshooting Guide:
>From the section titled "Clearing the failing flag for a disk" (sorry, it did
>not cut/paste too well):
Use the vxdisk list command to fi
Hi All,
You are correct - the "failing" flag is set when there's an intermediate
failure, "failed" gets set when it's more permanent. As shown below, vxedit is
the way to turn it off. It's only a flag, more of a fyi really, and will not
affect anything else.
Regards,
James.
_
I just created 3 new volumes and cannot figure out why there is so much
space missing when I do df -k on my Solaris 8 server:
/dev/vx/dsk/gemdg-san/gem5
157227000 104776 147302092 1%
/export/gemstone/gs-db/lmsolgc
/dev/vx/dsk/gemdg-san/gem7
153704440
Hi Geoff,
That "missing space" is generally referred to as filesystem overhead.
It is used by journaling filesystems to speed up recovery when running
an fsck. Even modern Solaris ufs will lose space.
If you don't want to lose the space, you can make a ufs filesystem and
then mount it with the