I received a few responses about this. The most helpful was from Nick Bone (awesome name, man) who pointed out the lumake(1M) command. This command builds a new BE, but is a step back from an all-out lucreate(1M). It even has built-in features to run as an at-job and email the results to a specified address. However, what I ended up with was a cron job like this, # Backup system to alternate disk. 10 12 * * 0 logadm -p now backup; date; lumake -n disk2 -l /var/log/backup.err -o /var/log/backup.log; date To set this up I had earlier used lucreate(1M) to make the initial "disk2" BE, and created a logadm.conf entry, # logadm -w backup /var/log/backup.log /var/log/backup.err I added the date(1) commands to easily see the start and finish times in the email cron(1M) kicks out. I had one response recommending using Flash Archives rather than Live Upgrade as a backup tool. Unfortunately, flars are not compatible with systems running non-global zones. LU works with zones. That was a show-stopper for flars. On 11/10/2009 at 3:50 PM, "Crist Clark" <Crist.Clark@globalstar.com> wrote: > I'm a little behind the curve here. I'm just now trying to > figure out the coolness that is Solaris Live Upgrade (LU). > The documentation covers doing things like release upgrades > or applying patch clusters pretty well, but I haven't yet > seen something on using LU to maintain a backup of the > current Boot Environment (BE). > > What we want is to have known-good snapshot of the running > BE on the second disk. This goes beyond just mirroring and > other ways to protect from hardware failure in that it > protects against higher layer problems (e.g. administrator > totally hosing the system with an unwise "rm -rf *"). > > We have long had our own scripts that backup the running > system onto a second disk in the chassis. It seems like LU > may be a much better way to do this. The obvious way to use > LU is to simply do an lucreate(1M) periodically, but that's > what our existing scripts pretty much do. > > What would be great is a way to run the lucreate(1M) once > and then after that use some other LU tools to update the > inactive BE to be a copy of the active with something less > resource intensive than copying all of the data from disk > 0 to disk 1. > > Is there something better than doing a new lucreate(1M) > each time? Anyone know of some Sun docs for using LU in > this manner, have their own homegrown methods, or pointers > to third party info? > > Also, what is the right procedure to switch to the backup BE > under these circumstances. We wouldn't be using luactivate(1M) > (at least not in the usual manner) since the whole point is > the live system is corrupted in some manner, possibly dead, > and we want to revert to the old one. > > I will summarize any useful responses. Thanks. _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Mon Dec 21 17:40:17 2009
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