
6-13
Working with Container Attributes
To display a container’s type, use the container list command,
as in the following example. In the example, the Type column
indicates that container 0 is a Volume set.
HPN0> container list
Executing: container list
Cluster Num Total Oth Stripe Scsi Partition
Dr Partner Label Type Size Ctr Size Usage C:ID:L Offset:Size
-- ------- ----- ------ ------ --- ------ ------- ------ -------------
0 0 Volume 30MB None 2:01:0 64KB: 15MB
Venus 2:02:0 64KB: 15MB
Displaying a Container’s Other Container ID
The other container ID attribute identifies container IDs that
identify the relationship between two containers that are part of a
create snapshot operation.
To display a container’s other container ID, use the container
list command with the /full switch, as in the following example.
In the example, the Oth Ctr column indicates two container IDs, 1
and 0, which correspond to container numbers 0+62 and 1+63
respectively. See Chapter 10, Working with Snapshot Containers, for a
description of the 0+62 and 1+63 container number designations and
for information on snapshot containers. The value 1 (associated with
container 0+62) indicates that container 1 represents the snapshot
container (the one that stores the data on container 0+62). The value
0 (associated with container 1+63) indicates that container 0
represents the container from which the snapshot is taken. (Note
that the example eliminates some items in the container list
display to make the example readable on this page.)
HPN0> container list /full=TRUE
Executing: container list /full=TRUE
RAID-5 The container is a RAID-5 set. A RAID-5 set is a
single-level container that is similar to a stripe set,
except that its data is redundant.
Reconf The container was reconfigured. A reconfigured
container is a container that was converted from
one container type to another. The Reconf container
type is not used in UNIX.
Container Type Meaning
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