Veritas Volume Manager 5.1 SP1 Administrator"s Guide (5900-1506, April 2011)

This example produces the following output:
V NAME RVG/VSET/CO KSTATE STATE LENGTH READPOL PREFPLEX UTYPE
PL NAME VOLUME KSTATE STATE LENGTH LAYOUT NCOL/WID MODE
SD NAME PLEX DISK DISKOFFS LENGTH [COL/]OFF DEVICE MODE
SV NAME PLEX VOLNAME NVOLLAYR LENGTH [COL/]OFF AM/NM MODE
SC NAME PLEX CACHE DISKOFFS LENGTH [COL/]OFF DEVICE MODE
DC NAME PARENTVOL LOGVOL
SP NAME SNAPVOL DCO
v pubs - ENABLED ACTIVE 22880 SELECT - fsgen
pl pubs-01 pubs ENABLED ACTIVE 22880 CONCAT - RW
sd mydg11-01 pubs-01 mydg11 0 22880 0 c1t0d0 ENA
v voldef - ENABLED ACTIVE 20480 SELECT - fsgen
pl voldef-01 voldef ENABLED ACTIVE 20480 CONCAT - RW
sd mydg12-02 voldef-0 mydg12 0 20480 0 c1t1d0 ENA
Here v is a volume, pl is a plex, and sd is a subdisk. The first few lines indicate
the headers that match each type of output line that follows. Each volume is listed
along with its associated plexes and subdisks.
You can ignore the headings for sub-volumes (SV), storage caches (SC), data change
objects (DCO) and snappoints (SP) in the sample output. No such objects are
associated with the volumes that are shown.
To display volume-related information for a specific volume, use the following
command:
# vxprint [-g diskgroup] -t volume
For example, to display information about the volume, voldef, in the disk group,
mydg, use the following command:
# vxprint -g mydg -t voldef
This example produces the following output:
V NAME RVG/VSET/CO KSTATE STATE LENGTH READPOL PREFPLEX UTYPE
v voldef - ENABLED ACTIVE 20480 SELECT - fsgen
If you enable enclosure-based naming, vxprint shows enclosure-based names for
the disk devices rather than OS-based names.
The output from the vxprint command includes information about the volume
state.
337Administering volumes
Displaying volume information