NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | EXAMPLES | FILES | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | NOTES
The pooladm command provides administrative operations on pools and sets. pooladm reads the specified filename and attempts to activate the pool configuration contained in it.
Before updating the current pool run-time configuration, pooladm validates the configuration for correctness.
Without options, pooladm prints out the current running pools configuration.
The following options are supported:
Instantiate the configuration at the given location. If a filename is not specified, it defaults to /etc/pooladm.conf.
Validate the configuration without actually updating the current active files.
Remove the currently active pool configuration. Destroy all defined resources, and return all formerly partitioned components to their default resources.
The following command instantiates the configuration contained at /home/admin/newconfig:
example# /usr/sbin/pooladm -c /home/admin/newconfig |
The following command attempts to instantiate the configuration contained at /home/admin/newconfig. It displays any error conditions that it encounters, but does not actually modify the active configuration.
example# /usr/sbin/pooladm -n -c /home/admin/newconfig |
The following command removes the current pool configuration:
example# /usr/sbin/pooladm -x |
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE |
ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
---|---|
Availability |
SUNWpool |
Interface Stability Invocation Output |
Evolving Unstable |
poolcfg(1M), poolbind(1M), libpool(3LIB), attributes(5),
System Administration Guide: Resource Management and Network Services
Resource bindings that are not presented in the form of a binding to a partitionable resource, such as the scheduling class, are not necessarily be modified in a pooladm -x operation.
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | EXAMPLES | FILES | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | NOTES