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You are about to reboot your system for some planned maintenance, perhaps through some
upgrade or migration. For this process to complete, you issue a : bosboot - a command.
It may be the case that the bosbootcommand fails, the output informing you "it is not safe to
reboot your system". Though initially, this might come across as a real and present problem
(which it is), there are tasks to perform that can prove that the system is indeed rebootable with
the current image. This article summarizes the tasks that can be performed to verify if it is save
to reboot.
Introduction
In this demonstration, I will be using hdisk0 in the examples provided. The checks I provide are
not an exhaustive list, but rather common issues I have come across over the years. When getting
bosboot errors, I always find it best to go by the numbers, that is, a checklist I tick off until the error
is resolved. Getting bosboot errors are not a show stopper, of course easy to say perhaps, but not
so easy to be convinced by that statement when you are by yourself and it is late into the evening
doing some IBM® AIX® maintenance. The errors typically occur due to some recent change on
the disks, this could be migration or accidental user error. I have always been able to resolve
bosboot issues and reboot a system, even if AIX shouts at me not to reboot.
The most common errors issued by the bosboot command that I have come across are:
What was the disk you last booted off? Is it what you think it was? Both of the following commands
will return the information you require.
# bootinfo -b
hdisk0
# getconf BOOT_DEVICE
hdisk0
If no output is returned in the above example, this is typically due to a recent rootvg migration, and
this in itself is not a real problem. So let's carry on with the tasks to check.
As a point of interest, cross check the date of the last hardware migration with the last time it was
rebooted using the following command.
# who -b
. system boot Dec 04 10:57
If you find that your disk is not a bootable device in the output from the ipl_varyon command,
ask yourself whether you issued a : chpv –c hdisk0 command by mistake? If you did clear the
boot records of the hdisk, it will not be displayed as bootable. If this is the case, rerun a bosboot
command on that disk with the following command:
# bosboot –ad /dev/hdisk0
Check that your boot logical volume which is typically hd5 resides on the bootable disk.
# lslv -m hd5
hd5:N/A
LP PP1 PV1 PP2 PV2 PP3 PV3
0001 0181 hdisk0
If it is not, then migrate it across to the bootable disk. If hd5 is damaged and you cannot migrate it,
then simply remove and re-create it afresh.
# rmlv hd5
# mklv -y hd5 -t boot -a e rootvg 1 hdisk0
Very rarely when running a bosboot command, AIX might complain about hd5 not being
contiguous across the partitions it has been allocated. I have experienced this only one time. If this
is the case, you have no choice but to remove hd5 and re-create it, as noted above. Then run the
bosboot to the bootable disk and ipldevice, as described further on.
If AIX states that it cannot run a bosboot command because hd5 existed on a previous hdisk or it
cannot find ipldevice, then the following should fix it: Confirm whether the bootable disk has the
same major and minor number as the ipldevice and the ipldevice is a hard link to the bootable disk.
# ls -l *hdisk0*
brw------- 1 root system 16, 2 Jan 15 11:23 hdisk0
crw------- 2 root system 16, 2 Oct 31 14:58 rhdisk0
# ls -l ipldevice
crw------- 2 root system 16, 2 Oct 31 14:58 ipldevice
In the above output, the major and minor numbers 16, 2 on hdisk0 match with that of the ipldevice,
and therefore, no problems here. Issue bosboot on both: the ipldevice and the bootable disk.
# bosboot –a /dev/ipldevice
# bosboot –a /dev/hdisk0
If the major and minor numbers are different on the bootable disk to ipldevice, then fix it by
removing the ipldevice and relinking.
# rm /dev/ipldevice
# ln /dev/rhdisk0 /dev/ipldevice
Now that ipldevice has been relinked to the bootable disk, run bosboot, on both the ipldevice and
the boot disk.
# bosboot -ad /dev/ipldevice
# bosboot -ad /dev/hdisk0
If your ipldeivce is not present at all, re-create the link as describe above.
In my experience, all conditions have been met. If you can run a bosboot command on the
ipldevice and the hdisk and the major and minor numbers match with the ipldevice, the host can be
rebooted. When the host comes up back, you will find that the bosboot –a command works fine.
can be confusing sometime because the errors just pop up and can mask another issue. However,
for this demonstration, let's assume it is a straight-forward savebase problem. First, check whether
the error is not due to space issues and run a verbose savebase command to confirm this.
# savebase –v
Next , let's assume it is a mirrored volume group and confirm that the volume group is indeed
synchronized correctly using the following command.
# syncvg –v rootvg
Then force a rebuild of the logical control blocks so that they are in sync with the volume group
descriptors area on the disks.
# synclvodm –Pv rootvg
That should be sufficient and the savebase command should now work. Finally, run the savebase
–v command, and all should be good. Then, to complete the process, run bosboot on both: the
ipldevice and the bootable disk, as noted earlier.
Conclusion
I have found that running the checks described in this article are sufficient to resolve the common
bosboot issues. Getting savebase and bosboot errors is an inconvenience for sure. But, you can
overcome the issue by following the checks discussed in this article. This can also give you the
confidence that a reboot is good to go.