Dynamic Root Disk A.3.13* Administrator's Guide HP-UX 11i v2, HP-UX 11i v3 (766142-001, March 2014)
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.
Extended options
The following extended options are available:
-x exclude_list= The full path for a file containing fully qualified file system
locations to be excluded from synchronization, listed one
per line, in addition to those described in drd-sync(1M). If
the location is a directory, the contents of the directory,
including all subdirectories, are excluded. Note, file names
must NOT end with a space.
-x
logfile=/var/opt/drd/drd.log
This is the path to the log file for this command. Each time
DRD is run, this file will grow larger. This can be changed,
for example, to a month-specific location for easier
archiving, off-host backup, and rotation.
-x log_verbosity=4 (Default.) Specifies the level of log verboseness. Replace 4
with the following values:
0 Only ERRORS and the starting/ending BANNER
messages.
1 Adds WARNING messages.
2 Adds NOTE messages.
3 Adds INFO messages (informational messages preceded
by the * character.)
4 (Default) Adds verbose INFO messages.
5 Adds additional detailed INFO messages.
-x verbosity=3 (Default.) Specifies the level of stdout/stderr verboseness. Replace 3
with the following values:
0 Only ERRORS and the starting/ending BANNER messages.
1 Adds WARNING messages.
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 umount command
The drd-umount(1M) command unmounts all the file systems in the cloned system image.
The drd umount command fails:
• If the inactive system image was created by a drd clone command and no file system is
mounted at /var/opt/drd/mnts/sysimage_001.
• If the inactive system image was the original source system when a drd clone command
was run and no file system is mounted at /var/opt/drd/mnts/sysimage_000.
If a cloned file system is mounted, drd umount unmounts the file systems, unmounting the root
file system (/) last. For a system with an LVM root, drd umount uses deactivate and vgexport
to export the inactive volume group from the system. This makes the unmounted inactive system
DRD command syntax 59