Dynamic Root Disk A.3.12.* Administrator's Guide

2 Adds NOTE messages.
3 (Default) Adds INFO messages (informational messages preceded by the * character.)
4 Adds verbose INFO messages.
5 Adds additional detailed INFO messages.
The drd status command
The drd-status(1M) command displays system-specific information about the clone (the inactive
system image) and the original disk (the active system image). The drd-status command provides
the following convenient information:
Clone Disk – specifies the target disk used to create the clone of the original image.
Clone Disk State reports whether the boot loader, AUTO file, and SYSINFO.TXT file (Itanium®
only) are present on the clone disk.
Date Created – specifies when the clone image was created.
Clone Mirror Disk – indicates “None” if the clone does not have a mirror, or lists the device
special file of the mirror disk.
Mirror Disk State – reports whether the boot loader, AUTO file, and SYSINFO.TXT file
(Itanium® only) are present on the mirror disk.
Original Disk – specifies which disk the original image is on.
Original Disk State – reports whether the boot loader, AUTO file, and SYSINFO.TXT file
(Itanium® only) are present on the original disk.
Booted Disk – specifies which disk is currently booted.
Activated Disk – upon reboot, the system will boot off this disk.
NOTE: Disk State varies depending on the system's architecture. The drd status command
will list either LIF Area or EFI Partition instead of Disk State. For Itanium® systems, the
Disk State will report whether the personality file, SYSINFO.TXT, exists on the specified disk. This
file is used to rehost a disk. See the drd-rehost(1M) man page for more information.
Disk State varies depending on the system's architecture. The drd status command lists either
Clone LIF Area or Clone EFI Partition.
The drd status command syntax is:
drd status [-?] [-q] [-v] [-x extended option=value] [-x -?] [-X
option_file]
Options
-? Displays the usage message for a DRD command. This option cannot be used with other
options.
-q Decreases the verbosity level by one each time it is specified. For example, -qq will reduce
the verbosity from the default value of 4 to 2. If both -x verbosity=5 and -qqq are
included on the command line, the effective verbosity is 2. The minimum verbosity level is 0.
(See also the -x verbosity option.)
-v Increases the verbosity level by one each time it is specified. For example, -v will increase
the effective verbosity from the default value of 4 to 5. If both -x verbosity=1 and -vv
are included on the command line, the effective verbosity is 3. The maximum verbosity level
is 5. (See also the -x verbosity option.)
-x extended_option=value
Sets the extended option to a value.
-x -?
Displays the list of possible -x (extended) options.
-X option_file
Gets the extended options from a file.
DRD command syntax 55