Dear *ites Try to audit the database.... it might solve ur problem...
rgds Gagan Singh Rana "What is now proved was once only imagined." the Business Enterprise Solutions Team QuantM Systems Pvt. Ltd. 79 Amrit Nagar, NDSE Part I New Delhi - 110003 Voice : 91-11-4691575/4602217 Fax : 91-11-4691188 Hand Phone : 91-9868091938 DISCLAIMER : The information in this e-mail is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended SOLELY for the addressee. Access to this e-mail by anyone else is unauthorized. If you are NOT the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken on it is prohibited and may be unlawful. Any opinions or advice contained in this e-mail are subject to the terms and conditions expressed in the governing client relationship engagement letter. ______________________________________________________________ Visit us at www.quantm.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Sims" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2003 5:53 PM Subject: Re: urgent! server is down! > >After a reboot yesterday tsm doesnt start. ... > ... > >ANR0900I Processing options file dsmserv.opt. > >ANR000W Unable to open default locale message catalog, /usr/lib/nls/msg/C/. > >ANR0990I Server restart-recovery in progress. > >ANR9999D lvminit.c(1872): The capacity of disk '/dev/rtsmvglv11' has > >changed; old capacity 983040 - new capacity 999424. > ... > > anyway I've never had to restore a db before. How do I go at it? > > I would take a deep breath and stand back and think about that situation > first... There's no good reason for a server to be running fine and > then fail to restart. Did someone change something?? It's known as a > "time bomb", as when someone made a change perhaps weeks ago while the > server was running, external to the server, and then when the server > goes to restart and thus re-read config files and re-open files > according to their names (rather than prevailing inode usage), it > can't get anywhere. The "locale" message really makes me wonder about > that: looks like someone changed the startup environment and its LANG > variable from en_US to C. Or wacky/changed start-up scripts are being > used. Consider the directory where you're sitting when you start the > server, and the viability of the start-up script. Examine the timestamps > and contents of your dsmserv.opt and /var/adsmserv/ files to see if > someone has monkeyed with things. Review your site system change log > to see if perhaps someone on the AIX side of things made an environmental > change that could have affected your server. > > Remember - restarting the server correctly is more important than > restarting it quickly. I would not even think of approaching a server > db restore until you've gotten to the bottom of what happened to the > structure of your environment, as such a restoral would only try to > restore into the possibly faulty environment. > > Richard Sims, BU > >