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I am receiving an error when attempting to boot up with the boot disk and software cd for installation of the Solaris 2.6 OS. I'm getting an error "Solaris partition not found" it doesn't even let me get to a point where I can run fdisk or anything. Can anyone help???
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Solaris 2.6
This is an x86 system and it has booted with the current hardware and version 2.6. I was only havin g problems with the video(kdmconfig) originally. Than there was an attempt for reinstallation made and this is what we have.
Thanks for your reply... |
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Good luck. There wasn't much on sunsolve for this -
This infodoc may help: This document explains the different variations that may be used to prepare a disk for the installation of Solaris x86. Removing a MS-DOS partition form your intended Solaris install drive If you have an existing MS-DOS partition on your intended install drive that resides on the whole intended install drive, you must use MS-DOS fdisk that is found on a MS-DOS setup floppy. Solaris will not see a MS-DOS partition as recognizable install space. To use the MS-DOS fdisk you would use MS-DOS boot disk and boot from the MS-DOS setup floppy. When booted from the MS-DOS setup floppy, you will see an a: prompt. From the a: prompt type fdisk, you will be prompted to enable large disk support Y or N. Choose Y for yes. This will display 4 or 5 options depending if other hard drives are seen by fdisk on this system. Choose option 4 which is to display the current partitions, Find the current partitions. Make note of the existing partitions and their type as you will be prompted for the type when you go to delete that partitions. Press escape to return to the main menu, choose option 3 "delete partition or logical drive" noting that if a logical drive exists for the partition you wish to delete, it must be removed first before that partition can be deleted. If a logical drive exists choose option 3 to delete the existing logical drive, then press [esc] to return to the main menu. Once again you will choose option 3 to delete partition, then from the next screen choose the type of partition that you will be deleting and choose the number that corresponds with that type then press enter. The screen will display the current partitions then will ask you which partition "by number to delete" type in that number [enter], then answer the questions when prompted. If another partition exists, follow the same steps to remove that partition as well. Beginning the Solaris non dual boot install: To begin the installation use the "device configuration assistant" to boot floppy and follow the prompts. On Solaris 8, if your bios supports cdrom boot, you may boot from the 1 of 2 CD to begin the installation. The Solaris install utility will build its own partition provided that all partitions had been removed, and all you will need to do is answer the questions when prompted. Using the Solaris fdisk to set hard drive partitions When the intended Solaris install drive is free of any non Solaris partitions, you can use the Solaris fdisk utility. Boot from the device configuration assistant from floppy or cdrom if Solaris 8 or better, follow the prompts to the screen that indicates available disks & selected disks. The option is found in the GUI window that indicates available disks & selected disks. At the lower center of the GUI window is an option that is labeled "Edit " that you will be able to select when your disk of choice is in the selected partition of the screen and highlighted, this will display the current partitioning of the drive that is currently selected. To setup the partitions choose partition & type of partition (a maximum of four partitions are possible due to the boot loader for Solaris )unless your goal is to create a data partition. Note - Prior to Solaris 7, the Solaris partition must be installed in the first 1024 cylinders of the hard drive. Setting up for multiple Operating Systems on the same hard drive If you intend to dual boot with other operating systems from the same hard drive and the MS-DOS partition greater than 2 GB of space, use Windows 98 because it uses a 32 bit file allocation table (FAT32) as opposed to using FAT16. Unfortunately, FAT16 has a 2 GB DOS partition limit. To allow space for Solaris use MS fdisk as described in the first section of this document (Removing a MS-DOS partition ) because it is necessary to make the space for Solaris raw, unallocated space. For multiple OS boot, you can set a partition for the first OS leaving the remaining space raw for Solaris and make sure it is on the first 1024 cylinders of the hard drive. The active state indicates that this is the active partition that the system will boot from. Solaris has it's own multiple OS boot loader which allows you to choose which OS to boot from (providing the OS's reside on the same drive). There are some common symptoms that may be seen if no space is available for Solaris: 1. When choosing interactive installation a device scan can hang the PC. 2. The system is installed with Solaris, but the other OS that was installed is gone and neither OS will boot. 3. At the point of the installation where you see what space is available and selected, but available is showing "none". Note - free space that is controlled by other OS's is not recognized by Solaris. 4. After the installation, the system complains about not finding boot files and it won't boot. This may indicate that the installation was not clean because not enough space was available during the install. Utilizing a third party program to use more than one disk drive and multiple Operating Systems You can partition your hard drive using a third party partition program. An advantage of using a third party partition program is that it is possible to move and shrink a DOS partition "without re-installing the MS operating system". You can make space available for Solaris to load on the same disk. |
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