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тАО06-01-2009 10:09 AM
тАО06-01-2009 10:09 AM
If it does need to have freespace be as big as physical mem, does /var/adm/crash need to live on a vg00 filesystem? How about links? What about if I wanted to link it to a SAN filesystem vs. local storage (since I don't have space); I suppose then I'd have to be sure it gets mounted at a lower runlevel?
Maybe monkey with /etc/lvmrc?
Thanks for any ideas on how to get a big space if I need it but don't have drive slots on my 7640 to support bigger /var?
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО06-01-2009 10:24 AM
тАО06-01-2009 10:24 AM
Re: /var/adm/crash size
Because, you could boot on san, you could also put /var/adm/crash on san. Why not effectively put on SAN if you don't have space.
Hope it helps
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тАО06-01-2009 10:26 AM
тАО06-01-2009 10:26 AM
SolutionUNIX because I majored in cryptology...
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тАО06-01-2009 10:28 AM
тАО06-01-2009 10:28 AM
Re: /var/adm/crash size
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тАО06-01-2009 10:35 AM
тАО06-01-2009 10:35 AM
Re: /var/adm/crash size
The minimum size for dump is half of RAM. This is the size of a typical crash dump.
I would not put a crash dump on a SAN because a simple cable issue can crash the system and disable your dump device.
You may wish to use Ignite to migrate your system to a larger system disk to accommodate this need.
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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тАО06-01-2009 07:06 PM
тАО06-01-2009 07:06 PM
Re: /var/adm/crash size
As far as a disk, any disk, anywhere will work. The crash dump is just a simple collection of files created by savecrash which is run after local filesystems are mounted. In fact, you can disable saving crash dumps and run savecrash to a tape instead. If you send it to a SAN and the SAN goes down, you very likely have much bigger problems to solve than where /var/adm/crash is located. Note that all filesystems are mounted at the same level (actually, local filesystems including fibre/SAN systems are mounted at rc0). Don't mess with lvmrc unless you have have an Ignite backup handy.
Bill Hassell, sysadmin