Table 13-73 contains a summary of the Oracle ACFS command utilities for multiple environments.
You can use acfsutil help on all platforms to display help text. You can run acfsutil version on all platforms to display the Oracle ACFS version.
When the options are entered with commands on a Windows platform, use / instead of - with the option. For example, you can display help for acfsutil on a Linux platform with acfsutil -h. On a Windows platform, use acfsutil /h.
Note that a mount point on a Windows operating system can be a drive letter or a directory including the drive letter.
Table 13-73 Summary of Oracle ACFS command utilities for multiple environments
| Command | Description |
|---|---|
|
Debugs an Oracle ACFS file system. |
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|
Displays information for a file in an Oracle ACFS file system. |
|
|
Displays detailed Oracle ACFS file system information. |
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|
Displays Oracle ACFS file system information for a given identifier and mount point. |
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|
Registers an Oracle ACFS file system with the Oracle ACFS mount registry. |
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|
Removes an Oracle ACFS file system. |
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|
Resizes an Oracle ACFS file system. |
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|
Creates a snapshot of an Oracle ACFS file system. |
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|
Deletes a snapshot of an Oracle ACFS file system. |
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|
Displays information about Oracle ACFS file system snapshots. |
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|
Modifies or displays Oracle ACFS tunable parameters. |
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|
Displays the canonical name of an Oracle ADVM volume. |
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|
Modifies or displays Oracle ADVM parameters. |
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|
Displays information about Oracle ADVM volumes. |
Debugs an Oracle ACFS file system.
acfsdbg -hacfsdbg [-r] [-l] volume_deviceTable 13-74 contains the options available with the acfsdbg command.
Table 13-74 Options for the acfsdbg command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Prints out the usage message which displays the various options that are available when invoking the |
|
|
Operates in read-only mode. No data is modified on the file system and all write commands are disabled. If the device is mounted anywhere, |
|
|
Processes kernel log files. The default is to not process the log files. |
|
|
Specifies the device name of the volume. |
acfsdbg is an extension to fsck and acfschkdsk, and is an interactive program that views and modifies on disk structures of the file system. This command is intended for experienced development and support engineers to examine on disk structures to diagnose problems. Use with caution.
When acfsdbg is started, it displays a command prompt. At the command prompt, you can enter the subcommands listed in Table 13-75.
You can also use acfsdbg for scripts by echoing acfsdbg subcommands with a shell pipe to the acfsdbg binary.
By default the file system is not modified when running the tool. If the -l option is used, the file system metadata in the transaction logs is applied before the interactive disk block dump session. The volume device must specify a volume with a dismounted Oracle ACFS file system. If the volume device has a mounted Oracle ACFS file system, acfsdbg displays an error message and exits.
You must be the administrator or a member of the Oracle ASM administrator group to run acfsdbg.
Table 13-75 lists the subcommands of acfsdbg.
Table 13-75 Subcommands for acfsdbg
| Option | Description | Syntax |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Calculates simple arithmetic expressions Valid operators: + - * / % & | ^ ~ << >> White space starts a new expression 0-1 represents a negative 1 |
-v Verbose modeexpr Simple 2+2 expression |
|
|
Generates and replaces checksum in header Header offset can be an expression as used by the White space starts a new header offset Command is disabled in read-only mode |
-C Regenerate for normal structure checksum-CE Re-generate for Extent structure checksumheader_offset Offset of the on disk structure header. The value can be an expression as used by the calculate subcommand |
|
|
Closes the open handle to the device |
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|
|
Echoes text on command line to stdout |
|
|
|
Displays the specified File Entry TAble (FETA) entry |
-f Displays all on disk structures related to this structure-e Displays all on disk extent information related to this structure-d Casts the structure as a directory and displays its contentsFETA_entry_number The File Entry Table number used to identify a file on the file system |
|
|
Displays help message |
|
|
|
Displays structure at disk offset |
-f Displays all on disk structures related to this structure-d Casts the structure as a directory and displays its contentsdisk_offset Disk offset to display. The value can be an expression as used by the calculate subcommand |
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|
Opens a handle to a device. The default is the volume device name entered on the command line |
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|
Sets the context of commands to the primary file system |
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|
Sets the prompt to the specified string |
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|
Exits the |
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|
Reads value from offset The default size to read in is 8 bytes The default count to read is 1 |
-1 Read byte value-2 Read 2 byte (short) value-4 Read 4 byte (int) value-8 Read 8 byte (long) value-s Read null- terminated stringcount Number of values to read. If not specified, the default is 1offset Disk offset to read. The value can be an expression as used by the calculate subcommand |
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|
Sets the context of commands to the specified snapshot |
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|
Writes hexadecimal, octal, or decimal values at the disk offset, estimating how many bytes to write based on value size or number of digits in leading 0 hexadecimal values The disk offset can be an expression used by the Numeric values can also be an expression as used by the This command is disabled in read-only mode |
-1 Write byte value-2 Write 2 byte (short) value-4 Write 4 byte (int) value-8 Write 8 byte (long) value-c Write text (no null termination). Enclose string in single-quotes (')-s Write null-terminated string. Enclose string in quotes (")-C Regenerate normal structure checksum-CE Regenerate extent structure checksumoffset Disk offset to write. The value can be an expression used by the calculate subcommandvalue The value to write. If numeric, the value can be an expression as used by the calculate subcommand |
Example 13-65 shows the use of the acfsdbg subcommand.
Example 13-65 Using the acfsdbg command
$ /sbin/acfsdbg /dev/asm/voume1-123
acfsdbg: version = 11.2.0.3.0
Oracle ASM Cluster File System (ACFS) On-Disk Structure Version: 39.0
The ACFS volume was created at Mon Mar 2 14:57:45 2011
acfsdbg>
acfsbdg> calculate 60*1024
61,440
61440
61440
0xf000
0170000
1111:0000:0000:0000
acfsdbg> prompt "acfsdbg test>"
acfsdbg test>
echo "offset 64*1024" | acfsdbg /dev/asm/volume1-123
Displays information for a file in an Oracle ACFS file system.
acfsutil info file -hacfsutil info file pathacfsutil info file -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-76 contains the options available with the acfsutil info file command.
Table 13-76 Options for the acfsutil info file command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies the full path name of a file. |
The acfsutil info file command displays information about a file in an Oracle ACFS file system. The information includes the extent map which details the locations of the blocks comprising the file and the used versus allocated storage for a file. Tagging information is also displayed for a file.
You must have read access to the specified file to run acfsutil info file.
The following is an example of acfsutil info file.
Displays detailed Oracle ACFS file system information.
acfsutil info fs -hacfsutil info fs [ {-o item|-s [interval [count] ] } ] [mount_point]acfsutil info fs -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-77 contains the options available with the acfsutil info fs command.
Table 13-77 Options for the acfsutil info fs command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Displays the specific file system item from the following list:
|
|
|
Displays file system statistics. The optional The optional If the |
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|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. Not a valid option for replication data. |
acfsutil info fs displays information and statistics about Oracle ACFS file systems. If replication has been initiated on a the file system, additional flags and status information are displayed. The values for the replication status field are primary, standby, or disabled.
The -o item option displays file system information for the item specified.
The -s option displays the amount and rate of change currently on a file system for the node that the command is run on.
With no option specified, the command displays file system information that includes the volume device name, the size of the file system, the amount of space available on the volume device, the file system mount time on this node, the state of the file system, the user specified block size, the number of Oracle ACFS snapshots, the space consumed by snapshots in the file system, and the optional name or volume label associated with the file system. The possible file system states are displayed in the flags line. These states include:
Offline indicates that the underlying devices are not accessible, possibly due to an Oracle ASM instance failure, disk group forced dismount, or an irrecoverable I/O error. The file system on this node can only be dismounted. All other attempts at access result in errors.
Available indicates that the file system is on line and operational.
Corrupt indicates that the file system should be checked and repaired at the earliest possible convenience to correct a detected inconsistency. For example, run the fsck command on Linux or the acfschkdsk command on Windows to check and repair the file system. Ensure that you run the command in repair mode to correct the problem. For more information, refer to "fsck" and "acfschkdsk".
Any user can run acfsutil info fs.
The following are examples of the use of acfsutil info fs.
Example 13-67 displays information about an Oracle ACFS file system in a Linux environment.
Example 13-67 Using the acfsutil info fs command on Linux
$ /sbin/acfsutil info fs
/primary
ACFS Version: 11.2.0.2.0
flags: MountPoint,Available,Replication
mount time: Mon Oct 25 12:11:03 2010
volumes: 1
total size: 5368709120
total free: 4144230400
primary volume: /dev/asm/pvol-74
label:
flags: Primary,Available,ADVM
on-disk version: 40.0
allocation unit: 4096
major, minor: 252, 37889
size: 5368709120
free: 4144230400
ADVM diskgroup REPLDG
ADVM resize increment: 268435456
ADVM redundancy: unprotected
ADVM stripe columns: 4
ADVM stripe width: 131072
number of snapshots: 0
snapshot space usage: 0
replication status: primary
/standby
ACFS Version: 11.2.0.2.0
flags: MountPoint,Available,Replication
mount time: Mon Oct 25 12:11:03 2010
volumes: 1
total size: 5368709120
total free: 5263945728
primary volume: /dev/asm/svol-74
label:
flags: Primary,Available,ADVM
on-disk version: 40.0
allocation unit: 4096
major, minor: 252, 37890
size: 5368709120
free: 5263945728
ADVM diskgroup REPLDG
ADVM resize increment: 268435456
ADVM redundancy: unprotected
ADVM stripe columns: 4
ADVM stripe width: 131072
number of snapshots: 0
snapshot space usage: 0
replication status: standby
$ /sbin/acfsutil info fs -o mountpoints,replication
/primary
1
/standby
1
$ /sbin/acfsutil info fs -o mountpoints,isreplprimary
/primary
1
/standby
0
$ /sbin/acfsutil info fs -o mountpoints,isreplstandby
/primary
0
/standby
1
Example 13-68 illustrates the use of acfsutil info fs in a Windows environment.
Example 13-68 Using the acfsutil info fs command on Windows
C:\oracle>acfsutil info fs /o freespace c:\oracle\acfsmounts\acfs1 968667136 C:\oracle>acfsutil info fs /o totalspace c:\oracle\acfsmounts\acfs1 1073741824 C:\oracle>acfsutil info fs /o volume c:\oracle\acfsmounts\acfs1 1 C:\oracle>acfsutil info fs /o primaryvolume c:\oracle\acfsmounts\acfs1 asm-volume1-311 C:\oracle>acfsutil info fs /o diskgroup c:\oracle\acfsmounts\acfs1 DATA C:\oracle>acfsutil info fs /o redundancy c:\oracle\acfsmounts\acfs1 mirror
Example 13-69 illustrates the use of acfsutil info fs with -s option to display the current amount and rate of change on a file system.
Example 13-69 Using the acfsutil info fs command with the -s option
$ /sbin/acfsutil info fs -s /u01/app/acfsmounts/myacfs
amount of change since mount: 359.22 MB
average rate of change since mount: 3 KB
$ /sbin/acfsutil info fs -s 60 4 /u01/app/acfsmounts/myacfs
amount of change since mount: 359.22 MB
average rate of change since mount: 3 KB/s
amount of change: 15.02 MB rate of change: 256 KB/s
amount of change: 9.46 MB rate of change: 161 KB/s
amount of change: 7.32 MB rate of change: 125 KB/s
amount of change: 6.89 MB rate of change: 117 KB/s
...
Displays Oracle ACFS file system information for a given identifier and mount point.
acfsutil info id -hacfsutil info id num mount_pointacfsutil info id -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-78 contains the options available with the acfsutil info id command.
Table 13-78 Options for the acfsutil info id command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. |
|
|
Specifies the Oracle ACFS file identifier number reported by the Oracle ACFS driver. The number should be specified in decimal format. |
acfsutil info id is used to translate an internal numeric Oracle ACFS file identifier to a path name in the file system. This is useful when the Oracle ACFS driver reports I/O errors to the system event logger associated with a particular file in an Oracle ACFS and identifies it by its internal identifier. You must have administrator privileges or you must be a member of the Oracle ASM administrator group to run acfsutil info id.
The following is an example of acfsutil info id.
Registers an Oracle ACFS file system with the Oracle ACFS mount registry.
acfsutil registry -hacfsutil registryacfsutil registry -a [-f] [-n { nodes|all } ] [-o moptions] device mount_pointacfsutil registry -d {device | mount_point}acfsutil registry -l [device | mount_point]acfsutil registry -m deviceacfsutil registry -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-79 contains the options available with the acfsutil registry command.
Table 13-79 Options for the acfsutil registry command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies to add the device, mount point, and associated The arguments represent all the information needed to mount the file system. At Oracle ACFS startup time these file systems are automatically mounted. On Windows the volume mount points on the specified directories are created if they do not exist. Duplicate device entries are not allowed. Duplicate mount points are allowed but must be include the |
|
|
Deletes the device or mount point from the Oracle ACFS mount registry. If a mount point is specified and it is not unique in the Oracle ACFS mount registry, the command fails and you must run the command again specifying the device as an argument. |
|
|
This is used in combination with |
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|
This is used in combination with |
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|
Specifies the mount options for use when mounting the file system. Valid for Linux, Solaris, and AIX. For specific |
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|
Lists all the mount points currently in the registry on a single line, with fields separated by a colon ( |
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|
Lists the registered mount point, if one exists, associated with the specified device. The mount point is only returned if the Oracle ACFS file system has been registered or has been previously mounted. |
|
|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. |
|
|
Specifies an Oracle ACFS device file that has been formatted. |
acfsutil registry adds or deletes a file system from the Oracle ACFS persistent mount registry. The mount registry is a global registry that is used at Oracle ACFS startup on each node to mount all file systems specified in it. root or asmadmin privileges are required to modify the registry. For information about operating system group privileges, see "About Privileges for Oracle ASM".
Any user is allowed to display the contents of the registry. To mount all the file systems in the Oracle ACFS mount registry, use the platform specific mount command with the all option. This is done automatically at Oracle ACFS startup on each node.
If no options are specified, the command displays all of the Oracle ACFS mounts in the registry.
Note:
Do not register an Oracle ACFS file system that has had an individual file system Cluster Ready Services (CRS) resource added. For example, do not register a file system withacfsutil registry if the Oracle ACFS file system has been registered using srvctl add filesystem.See "About the Oracle ACFS Mount Registry".
The following examples show the use of acfsutil registry. The first example shows how to add the volume device file and file system mount point to the registry. The second example shows how to list the registered mount point associated with the specified volume device file. The third example shows how to delete the specified volume device file from the registry.
Removes an Oracle ACFS file system.
acfsutil rmfs -hacfsutil rmfs deviceacfsutil rmfs -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-80 contains the options available with the acfsutil rmfs command.
Table 13-80 Options for the acfsutil rmfs command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies an Oracle ACFS device file that has been formatted. |
acfsutil rmfs is used to remove an Oracle ACFS that is dismounted. When the command is run, the superblock of the file system is disabled. root or asmadmin privileges are required to run this command. For information about operating system group privileges, see "About Privileges for Oracle ASM".
After acfsutil rmfs runs successfully, the MOUNTPATH and USAGE columns in the V$ASM_VOLUME view are cleared for the device. The removed Oracle ACFS can be restored using fsck or acfschkdsk. The device can be reformatted with a new Oracle ACFS using the mkfs or acfsformat commands.
The following example shows the use of acfsutil rmfs to remove the specified volume device file and associated file system.
Resizes an Oracle ACFS file system.
acfsutil size -hacfsutil size [+|-]n[K|M|G|T|P ] [device] mount_pointacfsutil size -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-81 contains the options available with the acfsutil size command.
Table 13-81 Options for the acfsutil size command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
[ |
Specifies the new size for the Oracle ACFS file system where |
|
|
Specifies that the integer supplied for size is in the units of |
|
|
Specifies the optional volume device file. |
|
|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted |
acfsutil size grows or shrinks the mounted Oracle ACFS and its underlying Oracle ADVM storage to match the new size specified. This operation also resizes the underlying Oracle ASM Volume file to match the new length that is specified. The disk group must have enough free storage to accommodate any requested increase to the file system size.
Reducing a file system size returns unused storage space located at the end of the file system to the disk group. Shrinking in this release is intended for accidents when the wrong initial size or resize increment was specified, and before the storage was actually used. After storage has been used for user data or file system metadata, it may not be possible to shrink the file system, even if the files using that storage have been deleted.
Note:
Defragmenting a file system is not supported in this release; only unused storage can be deallocated from the end of the file system.The size value is rounded up based on the block size of the file system and the allocation unit of the Oracle ASM volume device file. To determine the Oracle ASM volume device resize increment, examine the RESIZE_UNIT_MB field in the V$ASM_VOLUME view, or look for Resize Unit in the output of asmcmd volinfo or acfsutil info fs.
There is a limit of 5 extents for the file system's internal storage bitmap. This causes any attempts to increase the file system to fail after it has been increased four or more times. However, if after increasing the file system four times or more times the file system size is decreased, then you may be able to increase the file system size again if the size of the increase is less than the size of the decrease.
When the limit on a file system expansion has been reached, running fsck or acfschkdsk with the -a option may consolidate the internal storage bitmap, allowing future file system expansion.
root or users who are members of the asmadmin group can run this command. For information about operating system group privileges, see "About Privileges for Oracle ASM".
The following example shows the use of acfsutil size. This example increases the primary device file of /u01/app/acfsmounts/myacfs file system by 500 MB.
Creates a read-only or read-write snapshot of an Oracle ACFS file system.
acfsutil snap create -hacfsutil snap create [-r|-w] snapshot mount_pointacfsutil snap create -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-82 contains the options available with the acfsutil snap create command.
Table 13-82 Options for the acfsutil snap create command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Creates a read-only snapshot. This is the default setting. |
|
|
Creates a read-write snapshot. |
|
|
Specifies a name for the snapshot. The name provided must be a valid directory name. The |
|
|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. |
acfsutil snap create creates a read-only or read-write snapshot of the Oracle ACFS mounted on mount_point. You can specify -r for read-only or -w for read-write; read-only is the default if neither -r or -w are specified.
The read-write snapshot enables the fast creation of an Oracle ACFS snapshot image that can be both read and written without impacting the state of the Oracle ACFS file system hosting the snapshot images. The read-write functionality can be used for testing new versions of application software or running test scenarios on production file data without modifying the original file system.
Snapshots are not separate file systems. The snapshot appears in the .ACFS/snaps/snapshot directory and initially is a complete replica of the file system at the time the snapshot command was given. A read-only snapshot continues to preserve that initial point-in-time view. A read-write snapshot can be modified by updates written directly to the files located within the .ACFS/snaps/snapshot hierarchy.
Any user can access the snapshot directory by specifying the path name. However, the .ACFS directory itself is hidden from directory listings of the root of the file system. This prevents recursive commands, such as rm -rf or acfsutil tag set -r, from the root of the file system inadvertently operating on snapshot files.
Snapshots usually use very little storage initially as they share file system blocks with the original file system until a file changes.
Tools such as du report the total disk space usage of the snapshotted files, which includes the storage shared with the original versions of the files. To determine the total space used for the snapshots, use the acfsutil snap info or acfsutil info fs command. See "acfsutil info fs".
Oracle ACFS snapshots are immediately available for use after they are created. They are always online under the.ACFS/snaps directory when the original file system is mounted. No separate command is needed to mount them.
Administrator privileges are required to use this command or you must be a member of the Oracle ASM administrator group.
For more information about Oracle ACFS snapshots, see "About Oracle ACFS Snapshots".
Example 13-74 shows the use of the acfsutil snap create command.
Example 13-74 Using the acfsutil snap create command
$ acfsutil snap create -w midday_test1 /u01/critical_apps $ acfsutil snap create -w midday_test2 /u01/critical_apps $ /sbin/acfsutil snap create payroll_report1 /u01/critical_apps $ /sbin/acfsutil snap create payroll_report2 /u01/critical_apps $ ls /u01/critical_apps/.ACFS/snaps midday_test1 midday_test2 payroll_report1 payroll_report2
Deletes a snapshot of an Oracle ACFS file system.
acfsutil snap delete -hacfsutil snap delete snapshot mount_pointacfsutil snap delete -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-83 contains the options available with the acfsutil snap delete command.
Table 13-83 Options for the acfsutil snap delete command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies a name for the snapshot. |
|
|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. |
acfsutil snap delete deletes the snapshot named snapshot in the Oracle ACFS mounted on mount_point. After successful completion of the command, the representation of the snapshot in the.ACFS/snaps directory is removed. The command fails if any file within the snapshot is open on any cluster node. Note that the disk space used by the snapshot being deleted is freed by a background task after the completion of the acfsutil snap delete command. If one of these background threads is running to clean up a deleted snapshot, then the acfsutil snap info command shows a pending delete operation.
Administrator privileges are required to use this command or you must be a member of the Oracle ASM administrator group.
Example 13-75 shows the use of the acfsutil snap delete command.
Displays information about Oracle ACFS file system snapshots.
acfsutil snap info -hacfsutil snap info [snapshot] mount_pointacfsutil snap info -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-84 contains the options available with the acfsutil snap delete command.
Table 13-84 Options for the acfsutil snap info command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies a name for the snapshot. |
|
|
Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. |
The acfsutil snap info command displays information about an individual specified snapshot or all snapshots in the specified Oracle ACFS file system. The snapshot name, snapshot type (RO or RW), and creation date and time are displayed.
The snapshot space usage amount includes snapshot metadata. If all the files are deleted from a snapshot, some of the metadata still remains and that amount is displayed with acfsutil snap info.
The acfsutil snap info command also shows pending delete operations.
Example 13-76 shows the use of the acfsutil snap info command when there is a pending delete operation. When the background process finishes the clean up of the deleted snapshot, the delete pending row does not appear in the output.
Example 13-76 Using the acfsutil snap info command
$ /sbin/acfsutil snap info /u01/critical_apps
snapshot name: midday_test2
RO snapshot or RW snapshot: RW
snapshot creation time: Fri Feb 18 06:10:59 2011
snapshot name: payroll_report1
RO snapshot or RW snapshot: RO
snapshot creation time: Tue Feb 22 06:56:34 2011
snapshot name: payroll_report2
RO snapshot or RW snapshot: RO
snapshot creation time: Tue Feb 22 06:57:21 2011
number of snapshots: 3 (active)
1 (delete pending)
snapshot space usage: 8383348736
The acfsutil tune command displays the value of a specific tunable parameter or all Oracle ACFS tunable parameters, or sets the value of a tunable parameter in a persistent manner on a particular node.
acfsutil tune -hacfsutil tune [tunable_name]acfsutil tune tunable_name=valueacfsutil tune -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-85 contains the options available with the acfsutil tune command.
Table 13-85 Options for the acfsutil tune command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies the name of the tunable parameter. |
|
|
Specifies the value for a tunable parameter. |
The only Oracle ACFS tunable parameter is AcfsMaxOpenFiles, which limits the number of open Oracle ACFS files on Windows and AIX. Normally you do not have to change the value of this tunable parameter; however, you may want to consider increasing the value if you have a large working set of files in your Oracle ACFS file systems.
Changing a tunable parameter has an immediate effect and persists across restarts. You must be a root user or the Windows Administrator to change the value of a tunable parameter.
The first example prints Oracle ACFS tunable parameters. The second example changes the value of a tunable parameter.
advmutil canonical displays the canonical name of the specified Oracle ADVM device name.
advmutil -hadvmutil canonical volume_deviceadvmutil -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-86 contains the options available with the advmutil canonical command.
Table 13-86 Options for the advmutil canonical command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies a string identifying a Oracle ADVM volume device. |
There are several different formats that can identify an Oracle ADVM volume device, but a normalized, unambiguous (canonical) name should be used when the volume device name is used with other commands such as SRVCTL.
For example, on the Windows operating system you can use the following prefixes with a volume device name: \\.\, \??\, \\?\
The advmutil canonical command would return the canonical name that another utility would recognize without having to strip off extra characters. The command would most likely be used in a script.
The following examples show the use of advmutil canonical on a Windows operating system. For each example, the command returns the canonical name of the volume device.
advmutil tune displays the value of a specific Oracle ADVM parameter or sets the value of a specific Oracle ADVM parameter.
advmutil -hadvmutil tune parameter [= value]advmutil -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-87 contains the options available with the advmutil tune command.
Table 13-87 Options for the advmutil tune command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies the parameter for which you want to set or display the value. |
|
|
Optional value provided to set the value of the specified parameter. |
If a value is not provided, the advmutil tune command displays the value that is currently assigned to the specified parameter.
The parameters that can be specified with advmutil tune are the maximum kernel memory (max_memory) or the maximum time in minutes for the deadlock timer (deadlock_timer).
The maximum kernel memory (max_memory) specifies the maximum operating system (OS) kernel memory in megabytes that can be consumed by the Oracle ASM Dynamic Volume Manager driver to cache Oracle ASM extent maps.
Note:
Thedeadlock_timer parameter should only be set by Oracle Support Services.The first example sets the maximum kernel memory. The second example queries the current setting for the maximum kernel memory to be consumed by the Oracle ADVM. The third example changes the maximum time in minutes for the deadlock timer. The fourth example queries the current setting of a parameter.
advmutil volinfo displays information about Oracle ADVM volume devices.
advmutil -hadvmutil volinfo [-l][-L] [volume_device]advmutil -h displays help text and exits.
Table 13-88 contains the options available with the advmutil volinfo command.
Table 13-88 Options for the advmutil volinfo command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Specifies an optional volume device name. |
|
|
Separates the Oracle ADVM volume device information by field descriptions and colons on one line. |
|
|
Separates the Oracle ADVM volume device information by spaces on one line. |
advmutil volinfo displays information about Oracle ADVM volume devices in a list format by default. The -l option on Linux (/l on Windows) formats the display into a colon-separated string with field descriptions. The -L option on Linux (/L on Windows) formats the display into a space-separated string in a format suitable for scripting.
The first example displays information about an Oracle ADVM volume device, using the advmutil volinfo command with the volume device name. The second example displays information about the volume device using the -l option. The third example displays information about the volume device using the -L option.
Example 13-80 Using advmutil volinfo
$ /sbin/advmutil volinfo /dev/asm/volume1-123 Device : /dev/asm/volume1-228 Interface Version: 1 Size (MB): 256 Resize Increment (MB): 32 Redundancy: mirror Stripe Columns: 4 Stripe Width (KB): 128 Disk Group: DATA Volume: VOLUME1 Compatible.advm : 11.2.0.0.0 $ /sbin/advmutil volinfo -l /dev/asm/volume1-228 Device : /dev/asm/volume1-228 : Interface Version : 1 : Size (MB) : 256 : Resize Increment (MB) : 32 : Redundancy : mirror : Stripe Columns : 4 : Stripe Width (KB) : 128 : Disk Group : DATA : Volume : VOLUME1 : Compatible.advm : 11.2.0.0.0 $ /sbin/advmutil volinfo -L /dev/asm/volume1-228 /dev/asm/volume1-228 1 256 32 mirror 4 128 DATA VOLUME1 11.2.0.0.0