Hi,
I've not tested this mechanism on zones, however take a look at the
'mount -o remount' option within the global zone it self.
On 11/24/07, Jose, Tony <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> Hi all
>
>
>
> I am working with a Solaris 10 servers, so I set up 2 zones. The doubt that
> I have is
>
>
As long as it is not zone path, you can do it while zone is running.
1. First umount /zone_path/root/ from the global zone.
2. use zonecfg -z , and delete that mountpoint, using rm dir
3. next mount /zone_path/root/ from the global zone
4. Add this mount using zonecfg.
On Nov 23, 2007 10:29 AM
Hi all
I am working with a Solaris 10 servers, so I set up 2 zones. The doubt
that I have is
How can I do for establishing mount point with out reboot the zone.
Up to now when I want to establish a mount point in the zone that I do
something like is:
1. In the domain, I updates th
Ava,
Ava Zhang wrote:
> Konstantin Gremliza wrote:
>
>> Ava Zhang schrieb:
>>
>>>Zoram Thanga wrote:
>>>
>>>
That's the problem. Use an IP address which is not in use. Shared IP
doesn't mean you share the IP address itself. It's the IP *stack* that
is shared.
Zoram
The nature of the processors is transparent to the zone/resource pool
infrastructure as
it gets what the Solaris 10 OS gives it.
In other words, the processors listed in psrinfo can be allocated to the
zones,
either via pools or dedicated-cpu resource
thx
- amol
Bangalore, Suresh wrote:
>
>
You need to consider each zone to be an individual host with is own IP.
Share means it uses the same NIC card to connect to the internet. The
following is the RAW network output (ifconfig -a ) from the global zone
(dione) and comparing it with the same output for the local zone
(dione-dev) to