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advscan(8)

NAME

advscan - Locate AdvFS volumes on disk devices

SYNOPSIS

/sbin/advfs/advscan [-g] [-a] [-r] [-f domain_name] devices... disk_group...

OPTIONS

-a Scans all devices found in any /etc/fdmns domain as well as those in the command line. -f domain_name Fixes the domain count and the links in the /etc/fdmns directory for the named domain. -g List the AdvFS volumes in the order they are found on each disk device or LSM disk group. -r Re-creates missing domains. The domain name is created from the device names or LSM disk group names.

OPERANDS

devices Specifies the device names of disks to scan for AdvFS volumes. disk_group Specifies the Logical Storage Manager (LSM) disk groups to scan for AdvFS volumes.

DESCRIPTION

The advscan command locates AdvFS volumes (disk partitions or LSM volumes) that are in AdvFS domains. Given the AdvFS volumes, you can re-create or fix the /etc/fdmns directory of a named domain or LSM disk group. For example, if you have moved disks to a new system, moved disks around in a way that has changed device numbers, or have lost track of where the AdvFS domains are, you can use this command to locate them. Another use of the advscan command is to repair AdvFS domains when you have broken them. For example, if you mistakenly delete the /etc/fdmns directory, delete a domain directory in the /etc/fdmns directory, or delete links from a domain directory under the /etc/fdmns directory, you can use the advscan command to fix the problem. The advscan command accepts a list of disk device names and/or LSM disk groups names and searches all the disk partitions to determine which partitions are part of an AdvFS domain. You can run the advscan command to rebuild all or part of your /etc/fdmns directory or you can rebuild it manually by supplying all the names of the AdvFS volumes in a domain. If the -g option is not set, the AdvFS volumes are listed as they are grouped in domains. Set the option to list the AdvFS volumes in the order they are found on each disk. Run the advscan command with the -r option set to re-create missing domains from the /etc/fdmns directory, missing links, or the entire /etc/fdmns directory. Although the advscan command will rebuild the /etc/fdmns directory automatically, Compaq recommends that you always keep a hard-copy record of the current /etc/fdmns directory. To determine if a disk partition is part of an AdvFS domain, the advscan command performs the following functions: · Reads the first two pages of a partition to determine if it is an AdvFS volume and to find the domain information. · Reads the disk label to sort out overlapping partitions. The size of overlapping partitions are examined and compared to the domain information to determine which partitions are in the domain. These partitions are reported in the output. · Reads the boot block to determine if the partition is AdvFS root bootable. The advscan command displays the date the domain was created, the on-disk structure version, and the last known or current state of the volume. In order to mount an AdvFS file system into a domain, the domain must be consistent. An AdvFS domain is consistent when the number of physical partitions or volumes with the correct domain ID are equal to both the domain volume count (which is a number stored in the domain) and the number of links to the partitions that are in the /etc/fdmns directory. Domain inconsistencies can occur in diverse ways. Use the -f option to correct domain inconsistencies. If you attempt to mount an inconsistent domain, a message similar to the following will appear on the console: # Volume count mismatch for domain dmnz. dmnz expects 2 volumes, /etc/fdmns/dmnz has 1 links.

RESTRICTIONS

You must be the root user to use this command.

EXAMPLES

The following are examples of the output from the advscan command. 1. The following example scans devices dsk3 and diskgroup rootdg for AdvFS partitions: # advscan dsk3 rootdg Scanning devices /dev/rdisk/dskz3 rootdg Found domains: usr_domain Domain Id 30a91a42.0001e060 Created Tue Mar 16 14:37:54 1999 Domain volumes 2 /etc/fdmns links 2 Actual partitions found: rz3g rootdg.vol03 2. The following example scans devices found in /etc/fdmns. It uses the -g option to list partitions in the order they are found on the disks rather than grouping them into domains and matching them with the /etc/fdmns directory. # advscan -a -g scanning disks /dev/rdisk/dsk2 /dev/rdisk/dsk3 rootdg Partition Domain Id /dev/dsk2a 30a919ff.000ec470 V3, mounted, bootable 1 volume in domain Created Tue Mar 16 14:36:47 1999 Last mount Wed Jun 30 16:00:04 1999 /dev/dsk2g 30a91a32.0007c250 V3, mounted 1 volume in domain Created Tue Mar 16 14:37:38 1999 Last mount Thu Mar 25 17:14:16 1999 /dev/dsk3a 30abe160.00028eff V3, never mounted 1 volume in domain Created Thu Mar 18 17:12:00 1999 /dev/dsk3g 30a91a42.0001e060 V3, mounted 1 volume in domain Created Tue Mar 16 14:37:54 1999 Last mount Thu Mar 25 17:14:17 1999 rootdg.vol01 30c62c74.00036750 V3, dismounted 2 volumes in domain Created Wed Apr 7 15:51:16 1999 Last mount Wed Apr 7 17:16:06 1999 rootdg.vol02 30c62c74.00036750 V3, dismounted Created Wed Apr 7 15:51:16 1999 Last mount Wed Apr 7 17:16:06 1999 3. For the following example, two domains using device dsk3 and diskgroup rootdg were removed from the /etc/fdmns directory. The advscan command scans device dsk3 and diskgroup rootdg and then re-creates the missing domains. # advscan -r dsk3 rootdg Scanning disks /dev/disk/dsk3 /dev/rvol/rootdg Found domains: *unknown* Domain Id 30a91a42.0001e060 Created Tue Mar 16 14:37:54 1999 Domain volumes 1 /etc/fdmns links 0 Actual partitions found: dsk3g* *unknown* Domain Id 30c62c74.00036750 Created Wed Apr 7 15:51:16 1999 Domain volumes 2 /etc/fdmns links 0 Actual partitions found: rootdg.vol01* rootdg.vol02* Creating /etc/fdmns/domain_dsk3g/ linking dsk3g Creating /etc/fdmns/domain_rootdg.vol01_rootdg.vol02/ linking rootdg.vol01 linking rootdg.vol02

FILES

/sbin/advfs/advscan Specifies the command path.

SEE ALSO

Commands: disklabel(8) Files: fstab(4),

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