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| SUN Solaris The Solaris Operating System, usually known simply as Solaris, is a free Unix-based operating system introduced by Sun Microsystems . |
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| Dual Boot Solaris 8 | TStoddard | UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers | 3 | 01-24-2002 01:12 PM |
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Dual Solaris On same Disk
Hi,
I have a 120GB Hard disk on SUN Blade 1500 machine. Is it possible to have Solaris 8 and Solaris 10 on same disk. In case if it is possible, then what would be the initail steps to be carried out before installation. Thanks in advance. |
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#2
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From Sunsolve:
This is an example of how to install three Solaris releases on one disk; you may want to change the order and Solaris versions. 1. First (Solaris 9) install: Partition the slices as follow for a 18gb (for example) disk: c0t0d0s0 4gb / (we will use this one for solaris 9) c0t0d0s1 1gb swap c0t0d0s2 overlap c0t0d0s3 4gb sol8 c0t0d0s4 4gb sol7 c0t0d0s5 - c0t0d0s6 - c0t0d0s7 5gb /sharedspace - You can use the installation CD or the software 1/2 CD. NOTE: The installation cd will erase all data on the disk, so it is better to use the software 1/2 CD if data on the disk is to be preserved. - During the installation you will reach the window with "auto" or "manual layout" choose "manual layout", then "edit". - To save some time later, you can name the partitions after what you want to install on them later (/sol8 if you intend to use a partition for Solaris 8, for instance). 2. Second Solaris 8 install: - Boot from the software CD 1/2 of the Solaris release to be installed. - when you reach "select disk", choose the same hard disk again. - the next window is "Preserve Data?", choose "preserve". - rename the / slice of c0t0d0s0 to /s9 and select "preserve" (so that the solaris 9 install on slice 0 will not be overwritten). - continue and select manual layout, then customize - In the solaris 9 install (see step 1), you partitioned on slice 3 c0t0d0s3, solaris 8 (sol8) - specify swap again with same size as you used in step 1. - now in the customize window specify on slice 3 "/" with the same size as you specified in step 1. - define /sharedspace on slice 7 (c0t0d0s7) (again with same size). This way you will be able to boot solaris 8, write a file in /sharedspace reboot to solaris 9 and verify that the file is still there. 3. Third (Solaris 7) install: - same as in 2, but now you have to preserve slice 0 (solaris9) and slice 3 (solaris 8), so rename slice 3 to /sol8 and continue - specify swap with the same size as used earlier. - specify "/" in slice 4 (c0t0d0s4) with size - define on slice 7 /sharedspace again with same size 4. Create bootaliases for each Solaris version - ok>show-disks - you will get a alphabetical list of devices - select the bootdisk (letter "a" for example) create aliases: - ok>nvalias 9 ^Y (devicepath/disk) ("^Y" is "control-Y") Use the corrsponding letter to determine the path to the slice ("a" equals slice 0, "b", equals slice 1 and so on), then add @0,0:<slice> to the end of the disk name. @0,0:a <--- Solaris 9, which was installed on slice 0. - for solaris 8, which we installed on slice 3, we use: ok>nvalias 8 ^Y (devicepath/disk)@0,0:d - and finally, for solaris 7, which is slice 4, we use: ok>nvalias 7 ^Y (devicepath/disk)@0,0:e finally setup the boot-device + diag-device variables correctly for 9,8 and 7. ok>setenv boot-device 9 8 7 net ok>setenv diag-device 9 8 7 net you can now choose which os you want to boot from, all installed on one disk: ok>boot 9 ok>boot 8 ok>boot 7 NOTE:Each os will mount /sharedspace and be able to read/ write into it. |
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