I must be missing something, because when I go to service.software.ibm.com, I get Tech Support page.
I select RS/6000, then
Preventative Maintenance, then
Fixes for AIX v4
Download Maintenance
Select Maintenance Level
and get list of gzip files, but no Readme's.
So, it looks like I can...
Have you checked ulimit for max CPU time?
If it's not set to unlimited, the process will be stopped.
eg.
# ulimit -a
time(seconds) unlimited
file(blocks) 2097151
data(kbytes) 131072
stack(kbytes) 32768
memory(kbytes) 32768
coredump(blocks) unlimited...
If this route gets reset after a reboot, I would guess that there is an rc file (ie rc.net, rc.tcpip, rc.bsdnet) that is setting it on boot. You could
cd /etc/
grep route rc*
Another possibility is that the there is a line in the /etc/inittab that is starting a program that is setting this...
I've heard that there are some problems with AIX 4.3.3 Maintenance Level 08, including one where hostname resolution is affected. I'm trying to find out what fixes are in ML 08 and ML09. Can anyone point me to a website that lists what's included in Maintenance Levels?
Thanks,
You can set the default route via smit (as in your example) or via the command line,
# route add default <address>. Both ways will update the ODM.
When you set the default route via smit, by default, it adds the options -hopcount 1.
(For more info on the -hopcount option see the man pages for...
On the AIX box, check the routing information:
# netstat -r
Your destination "default" should be the router that connects your PCs and AIX box.
Also, make sure that your /etc/host table is has the new ip addresses for the PCs.
I've had the same problem myself. I got around it by restoring the subdirectory, rather than the specific file. Don't know exactly why it worked, but it did.
If I use smitty jfs | Change/Show Characteristics of a Journaled filesystems
select filesystem |
I can see "Large File Enabled = True". Is there a command line equivalent to get this information?
Thanks,
Are you saying that you've had Oracle failover successfully, between 32- and 64- bit machines? I could see that working if the version of Oracle was 32 bit mode only, but if Oracle is 64-bit, then I would expect to see problems if it failed over to as 32- machine. At least performance issues...
Clustering between 2 nodes with dissimilar operating systems is not available. A couple of the issues are 1) hardware - how are you going to connect the shared disk. This is possible if you're using SAN technology, and it is possible with scsi, but difficult.
2) software - what application...
Aix 4.3.2 on 64-bit mode is different than AIX 4.3.2 with 32-bit mode. The 64-bit mode has many advantages, but specifically for databases, it gives the ability to address memory in 64-bit memory chunks which allows faster access to data.
For details on 64-bit see...
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