
7-4
Command Line Interface User’s Guide
■ Enables the NVRAM write-back cache setting for the specified
volume set if a battery is present and its status is Ok.
If you do not use the /cache switch, you can enable the volume
set’s raw container cache later with the container set cache
command. See Chapter 9, Modifying Containers, for more
information on how to enable a volume set’s raw container cache
after creating it.
Specifying a Label for a Volume Set
The container label attribute identifies the name assigned to a
container. Note that this label is not the label that displays in
Windows Explorer and Disk Administrator. You can specify a
container label while creating a volume set or at a later time using
the container set label command. See Displaying and Setting a
Container Label in Chapter 6, Working with Container Attributes, for a
description of the container set label command.
In the following example, the container create volume
command with the /label switch creates a volume set with the label
Mars.
HPN0> container create volume /label=Mars ((2,1,0), 100M)
Executing: container create volume /label="Mars"
((CHANNEL=2,ID=1,LUN=0), 104,857,600)
Container 0 created
Understanding How to Create a Volume Set
This section provides an example that describes how to create a
volume set.
Before creating a volume set, use the disk show space command
to display information about your disks, as in the following
example. In the example, the Usage column indicates Free for each
disk, which means that the space on each disk consists of freespace.
HPN0> disk show space
Executing: disk show space
Scsi C:ID:L Usage Size
----------- ---------- -------------
2:01:0 Free 64.0KB:8.47GB
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