HP P6000 Replication Solutions Manager User Guide (T3680-96089, October 2012)

Linux and UNIX mount points and device names
Examples
Mount pointDevice nameHost OS
/home/cats/dev/dsk/hd1AIX
/users/cats/dev/dsk/c2t0d2HP-UX
/var/cats/dev/sda3Linux
/usr/cats/dev/dsk/c0t5d0s6Solaris
/users/cats/dev/disk/dsk100cTru64 UNIX
Windows mount points and device names
Examples
Mount pointDevice nameHost OS
Windows
E:\Disk3Drive
E:\pets\catsDisk3Drive & folders
In a Windows OS, mount points are typically called drive letters. In the drive example the host
volume is mounted as drive letter E:\. In the drive & folder example, the host volume is mounted
as drive letter E:\, in the folder \pets\cats.
OpenVMS mount points and device names
Examples
Mount pointVolume labelDevice nameHost OS
CATS_DBCATS_DB$1$DGA2:OpenVMS
PETS.CATSPETS.CATS$1$DGA2:
Mount point names are based on OpenVMS volume labels.
Partitions and slices
In most OSs a single disk (host volume) is divided into logical parts called partitions. In some OSs,
partitions are called slices or disk sections.
For some replication manager job commands, you may need to enter a host volume's partition or
ID into a command argument. If necessary, see your host operating system documentation for
details on identifying partitions.
HP-UX disk sections
If you are a superuser for an HP-UX host, you can identify host volume disk sections by viewing
the /etc/mnttab file.
HP-UX supports up to 16 disk sections, numbered 0 through 15. Disk section number 2 refers to
the entire disk.
132 Host volumes