Displays configured virtual shared disks and their characteristics.
lsvsd [-l | -s[ vsd_name…]] | [-i]
The lsvsd command displays information about virtual shared disks currently configured on the node on which the command is run. If a list of virtual shared disks follows the flags, information about those virtual shared disks is displayed. lsvsd with no arguments or flags lists the names of all the virtual shared disks currently configured on the node.
The lsvsd command displays information about both the configuration and the usage of a virtual shared disk.
You can use the System Management Interface Tool (SMIT) to run the lsvsd command. To use SMIT, enter:
smit vsd_mgmt
 and select the Show All Managed Virtual Shared Disk Characteristics option.
This flag is not compatible with the -s flag.
The server_list of the virtual shared disk is listed.
The local logical operations are requests which were made by a process executing at the local node, whereas the remote logical operations were made by a process executing on a remote node. Client operations are those local logical requests that cannot be satisfied locally, and have to be sent to a remote node. Physical operations are those server operations which must be passed to the underlying disk device.
This flag is not compatible with the -l flag.
You must be in the AIX® bin group to run this command.
You must issue this command from a node that is online in the peer domain. To bring a peer domain online, use the startrpdomain command. To bring a particular node online in an existing peer domain, use the startrpnode command. For more information on creating and administering an RSCT peer domain, refer to RSCT Administration Guide .
lsvsd
 The
system displays a message similar to the following:  vsd00
 
vsd01
 
.
.
.
lsvsd -l
 The system displays a message similar
to the following:  minor  state  server  lv_major  lv_minor  vsd_name  size (MB)
83     STP      -1        0        0      vsdn08v3    20
84     STP      -1        0        0      vsdn08v4    16
lsvsd -s
 The
system displays a message similar to the following:  lc-rd lc-wt rm-rd rm-wt c-rd c-wt  p-rd  p-wt   br   bw  vsd_name
   84    84  2858   169    0    0   348   253  164  184  vsd.vsd1
    0     0     0     0    0    0     0     0    0    0  vsd.rl01
    0     0     0     0    0    0     0     0    0    0  vsd.rl02
The following table spells out the names of the headers used in the displays for the -l and -s options:
/opt/rsct/vsd/bin/lsvsd