Veritas Volume Manager 5.0 Administrator's Guide (September 2006)

385Administering hot-relocation
Modifying the behavior of hot-relocation
vxrelocd from starting at system startup time by editing the startup file that invokes
vxrelocd: /sbin/init.d/vxvm-recover.
You can alter the behavior of vxrelocd as follows:
To prevent vxrelocd starting, comment out the entry that invokes it in the startup
file:
# nohup vxrelocd root &
By default, vxrelocd sends electronic mail to root when failures are detected and
relocation actions are performed. You can instruct vxrelocd to notify additional
users by adding the appropriate user names as shown here:
nohup vxrelocd root user1 user2 &
To reduce the impact of recovery on system performance, you can instruct
vxrelocd to increase the delay between the recovery of each region of the volume,
as shown in the following example:
nohup vxrelocd -o slow[=IOdelay] root &
where the optional IOdelay value indicates the desired delay in milliseconds. The
default value for the delay is 250 milliseconds.
After making changes to the way vxrelocd is invoked in the startup file, reboot the
system so that the changes go into effect.
You can also stop hot-relocation at any time by killing the vxrelocd process (this
should not be done while a hot-relocation attempt is in progress).
When executing vxrelocd manually, either include /etc/vx/bin in your PATH or
specify
vxrelocd’s absolute pathname, for example:
# PATH=/etc/vx/bin:$PATH
# export PATH
# nohup vxrelocd root &
Alternatively, you can use the following command:
# nohup /etc/vx/bin/vxrelocd root user1 user2 &
See the vxrelocd(1M) manual page for more information.