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тАО05-05-2003 05:04 AM
тАО05-05-2003 05:04 AM
single user vs maintenance mode
i want to know what is difference between single
user mode and maintenance mode or i can say difference between
hpux -is and hpux -lm
regards
rajat
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тАО05-05-2003 05:08 AM
тАО05-05-2003 05:08 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
-lm Boot the system in LVM maintenance
mode, configure only the root volume,
and then initiate single user mode.
Pete
Pete
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тАО05-05-2003 05:10 AM
тАО05-05-2003 05:10 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
The only problems that would require booting to Maintenance Mode are
those which prevent the system from booting. For example, if a root volume
group contained three disks, one corrupt and was removed the system, the system
will still boot fine from 1st disk. You need to boot your system into LVM
Maintenance mode to correct a problem with your computer's logical volumes
and/or volume groups. In these cases, the system should be booted
to Maintenance Mode, the boot problem fixed (typically vgcfgrestore), and the
system rebooted fully or to single-user mode so that other LVM configuration
issues can be dealt with, if necessary. Thus LVM maintenance mode boots should
only be done for recovery purposes, when it is not possible to boot in
multi-user or single-user mode.
Regards,
Zeev
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тАО05-05-2003 05:34 AM
тАО05-05-2003 05:34 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
If you are not abel to view this link then let us know
http://www1.itrc.hp.com/service/cki/docDisplay.do?docLocale=en_US&docId=200000066581126
-USA..
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тАО05-05-2003 05:56 AM
тАО05-05-2003 05:56 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
I've done logical volume mainteance after booting hpux -is without any ill effect.
SEP
Owner of ISN Corporation
http://isnamerica.com
http://hpuxconsulting.com
Sponsor: http://hpux.ws
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hpuxlinux
Founder http://newdatacloud.com
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тАО05-05-2003 05:56 AM
тАО05-05-2003 05:56 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
In SUm as well as Normal boot, VG00 is activated and root file system is located according to some fields contained in the LVM header of boot disk (see lvlnboot manual pages). In Mm, instead, root file system is located using /stand/rootconf file. This file contains three fields: the magic number (0xdeadbeef), the disk block number where root file system starts (32 bit length) and the size of root file system (32 bit length).
In your box, try
# xd ???tx4d4 /stand/rootconf
You'll get something similar to:
0000000 deadbeef 10cb60 15000
-559038737 1100640 86016
000000c
Notice that, in Mm, the boot procedure assumes that the root file system is CONTIGUOUS and it all resides in the same disk.
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тАО05-05-2003 06:07 AM
тАО05-05-2003 06:07 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
a) the second field in /stand/rootconf is a disk block value. Block disk size is 1024 bytes (1 KB), not 512 bytes.
b) the size of root file system (third field) is given in disk blocks
The maintenance mode is needed when LVM header of boot disk is corrupt or misconfigured.
For more details about /stand/rootconf read '-c' option of lvlnboot command.
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тАО05-05-2003 06:17 AM
тАО05-05-2003 06:17 AM
Re: single user vs maintenance mode
Additionally, LVM maintenance mode can cause damage to your core O/S file system if used with 'init 1, init 2 or init 3'. You can't come up to higher run levels with 'hpux -lm -is' you have to reboot..