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1. Getting Started With Solaris Volume Manager 2. Storage Management Concepts 3. Solaris Volume Manager Overview 4. Solaris Volume Manager for Sun Cluster (Overview) 5. Configuring and Using Solaris Volume Manager (Scenario) 8. RAID-0 (Stripe and Concatenation) Volumes (Overview) 9. RAID-0 (Stripe and Concatenation) Volumes (Tasks) 10. RAID-1 (Mirror) Volumes (Overview) 11. RAID-1 (Mirror) Volumes (Tasks) 12. Soft Partitions (Overview) 16. Hot Spare Pools (Overview) 20. Maintaining Solaris Volume Manager (Tasks) 21. Best Practices for Solaris Volume Manager 22. Top-Down Volume Creation (Overview) 23. Top-Down Volume Creation (Tasks) 24. Monitoring and Error Reporting (Tasks) 25. Troubleshooting Solaris Volume Manager (Tasks) Troubleshooting Solaris Volume Manager (Task Map) Overview of Troubleshooting the System Recovering From Disk Movement Problems Device ID Discrepancies After Upgrading to the Solaris 10 Release Recovering the root (/) RAID-1 (Mirror) Volume How to Recover From a Boot Device Failure Recovering From State Database Replica Failures How to Recover From Insufficient State Database Replicas Recovering From Soft Partition Problems How to Recover Configuration Data for a Soft Partition Recovering Storage From a Different System How to Recover Storage From a Local Disk Set Recovering From Disk Set Problems Performing Mounted Filesystem Backups Using the ufsdump Command How to Perform a Backup of a Mounted Filesystem Located on a RAID-1 Volume A. Important Solaris Volume Manager Files B. Solaris Volume Manager Quick Reference |
Performing System RecoverySometimes it is useful to boot from a Solaris OS install image on DVD or CD media to perform a system recovery. Resetting the root password is one example of when using the install image is useful. If you are using a Solaris Volume Manager configuration, then you want to mount the Solaris Volume Manager volumes instead of the underlying disks. This step is especially important if the root (/) file system is mirrored. Because Solaris Volume Manager is part of the Solaris OS, mounting the Solaris Volume Manager volumes ensures that any changes are reflected on both sides of the mirror. Use the following procedure to make the Solaris Volume Manager volumes accessible from a Solaris OS DVD or CD-ROM install image. How to Recover a System Using a Solaris Volume Manager ConfigurationBoot your system from the Solaris OS installation DVD or CD media. Perform this procedure from the root prompt of the Solaris miniroot.
# mount -o ro /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s0 /a # cp /a/kernel/drv/md.conf /kernel/drv/md.conf # umount /a # update_drv -f md Cannot unload module: md Will be unloaded upon reboot. Forcing update of md.conf. devfsadm: mkdir fialed for /dev 0xled: Read-only file system devfsadm: inst_sync failed for /etc/path_to_inst.1359: Read-only file system devfsadm: WARNING: failed to update /etc/path_to_inst # metainit -r # metasync d0 # mount /dev/md/dsk/d0 /a |
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