Re: bootlist info

From: Sheets, Jerald (JSHeets@OLOLRMC.COM)
Date: Thu Dec 26 2002 - 13:46:48 EST


When I had AIX4 Admin 1 &2 back in Spring of 1997, they taught it with keys.
We were still selling some systems with keys (I wanna say some of the Power
PC stuff)...which makes no sense to me since they were all PCI, and not MCA.
However, that's where I learned keys. Nowadays, we've got all S/H/F series
boxes, and the F stuff is going away. We're looking at a Regatta, but no
telling when we'll have that kinda scratch.

It's all moot for me, though... The hospital I work for won't pay to save
their collective lives, so I'm hunting around for work. I used to live in
Akron (Hi Bill!) and would like to live up that way again, or D.C., or even
Atlanta, but there justisn't any movement in the markets right now. Maybe
we can expect an upswing next year. I guess I should've asked Santa for an
economic boom. :-)

Jerald Sheets
Sr. UNIX Systems Administrator
Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center

-----Original Message-----
From: Alberto Cozer [mailto:acozer@FTI.COM.BR]
Sent: Thursday, December 26, 2002 12:28 PM
To: aix-l@Princeton.EDU
Subject: Re: bootlist info

I guess that's because the machines are not coming with the key for boot
mode selection since 1996 or earlier. Am I wrong? I would never call a 1996
RS6000 as modern. :-)

The last machine that I used with that key was a 570, which is very old. I
also have a 34H at home that owns a powerful key for boot selection.

Best regards,

Alberto Cozer
Security Outsource Manager, Future Technologies Digital Security
IBM Certified AIX System Specialist
Checkpoint Certified Security Expert, CCSE
acozer@fti.com.br
http://www.fti.com.br

-----IBM AIX Discussion List <aix-l@Princeton.EDU> wrote: -----

To: aix-l@Princeton.EDU
From: "Myers, Drew" <MyersD@GOALAMO.COM>
Sent by: IBM AIX Discussion List <aix-l@Princeton.EDU>
Date: 12/26/2002 01:37PM
Subject: Re: bootlist info

For my education, what are you referring to as "modern" and not modern
machines?

-----Original Message-----
From: pSeries AIX Geek [mailto:aixgeek@YAHOO.COM]
Sent: Tuesday, December 24, 2002 2:38 PM
To: aix-l@Princeton.EDU
Subject: Re: bootlist info

Don't worry about it. The service mode bootlist is a
throwback to the days when you had a key to toggle
back and forth between service and normal.

On "modern" machines (actually, this probably worked
back then), the system determines what media you are
booting from and (in part) determines what mode to
use.

For example, set your bootlist with:
bootlist -m normal cd0 hdisk0 hdisk1

Now insert a CD and boot. You'll come up in
service/maintenance mode.

--- "CHANDRASHEKAR, MANI"
<MANI_CHANDRASHEKAR@FLEET.COM> wrote:
> All,
>
> I have hdisk0 as the primary boot disk and
> hdisk1 as the mirrored
> disk. I do understand that under normal conditions
> if the os does not find
> the boot image on hdisk0 then it will boot from
> hdisk1.I have the normal
> bootlist setting as :
> bootlist -m normal -o
>
> hdisk0
> hdisk1
> rmt0
> cd0
> fd0
> ent0
>
> 1) How should I have my service bootlist listed?
> 2) If I have hdisk1 as the first entry in the
> service bootlist and if my
> hdisk0 is bad, can I boot my system in the service
> mode and bring all my
> filesystem's up..? (or)
> should I modify the normal bootlist to have
> hdisk1 as the first
> entry..?
>
> Thanks,
>
> shekar...

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