Displaying an unknown file system, Displaying an unmapped container – HP NetRAID-4M Controller User Manual

Page 134

Advertising
background image

6-28

Command Line Interface User’s Guide

To display whether a container is a UNIX-opened container, use the

container list

command, as in the following example. In the

example, the Usage column indicates Open, which means that the
container was mounted or opened by UNIX.

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 Open 2:01:0 64KB: 15MB

Tigris 2:02:0 64KB: 15MB

Displaying an Unknown File System

The

unknown file system

attribute indicates that an unknown

file system resides on this container. For UNIX, the

unknown file

system

attribute indicates that the operating system recognized this

container, and there has not been a query (e.g., mount, fdisk, read or
write) on the container.

To display whether a file system is an unknown file system, use the

container list

command, as in the following example. In the

example, the Usage column indicates Unknown, which means that
the file system is an unknown file system.

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 Unknown 2:01:0 64KB: 15MB

Tigris 2:02:0 64KB: 15MB

Displaying an Unmapped Container

The

unmapped container

attribute indicates that a container is

unusable and cannot be mounted.

To display whether a container is an unmapped container, use the

container list

command, as in the following example. In the

example, the Usage column indicates UnMap’d (unmapped), which
means that the container is an unmapped container.

HPN0> container list

Advertising