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Full Discussion: clone disk
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory clone disk Post 302102616 by stamperr on Thursday 11th of January 2007 03:47:13 PM
Old 01-11-2007
clone disk

Disk cloning
I had an external SCSI master disk that I used to clone to an identical external SCSI disk because the other SCSI disk would become corrupted. My original Master became corrupted so I used one of the other to good disk to copy back to the master. Unfortunately the new master needs to be able to boot but I don't know how to make the new master a bootable disk. I do not know anything about Unix commands and have been following a set of instructions that someone made 6 years ago.

I took a known good disk when I got to step 12 I reversed the 6 letter ID names and followed the rest of the instructions. I started the instructions over again and when I get to step 11 and try to log in as root is says that is a non bootable disk.
I am adding the instructions so someone with knowledge about UNIX might be able to make sense of this.

1. Power down the workstation and the external load disk.
2. Replace the external load disk with this disk (clone).
3. Power up this disk (clone).
4. Power up the workstation.
5. When you see the display and the message “Initializing memory” press<STOP A>.
6. At the OK prompt type: setenv use-nvramrc? True
7. At the OK prompt type: show-disks
8. Select drive a by pressing the A key.
9. At the OK prompt type: nvalias clone <CTRL Y>@1,0) (press ctrl y followed by @ followed by 1 followed by comma followed by zero)

10. At the OK prompt type: Boot clone (machine will boot of the clone disk)
11. Log in as root. (Type in Password)
12. In a terminal window type: ./copydisk donotpart c1t1d0 c0t0d0
13. When asked of you would like to modify /etc/vfstab on the target disk? Type Y <return>
14. When asked to enter the new 6 letter disk id for thee target- type c0t0d0 <return>
15. At the # prompt type init 0
16. When the OK prompt appears power down the workstation and the external disk (clone).
17. Replace the external disk (clone) with the external load disk.
18. Power up the external load disk.
19. Power up the workstation.
20. Log in.

Smilie
 

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installboot(1M) 														   installboot(1M)

NAME
installboot - install bootblocks in a disk partition SYNOPSIS
installboot bootblk raw-disk-device The boot(1M) program, ufsboot, is loaded from disk by the bootblock program which resides in the boot area of a disk partition. The ufs boot objects are platform-dependent, and reside in the /usr/platform/platform-name/lib/fs/ufs directory. The platform name can be found using the -i option of uname(1). The installboot utility is a SPARC only program. It is not supported on the architecture. users should use installgrub(1M) instead. bootblk The name of the bootblock code. raw-disk-device The name of the disk device onto which the bootblock code is to be installed; it must be a character device which is read- able and writable. Naming conventions for a SCSI or IPI drive are c?t?d?s? and c?d?s? for an IDE drive. Example 1: Installing UFS Boot Block To install a ufs boot block on slice 0 of target 0 on controller 1 of the platform where the command is being run, use: example# installboot /usr/platform/`uname -i`/lib/fs/ufs/bootblk /dev/rdsk/c1t0d0s0 /usr/platform/platform-name/lib/fs/ufs directory where ufs boot objects reside. /platform/platform-name/ufsboot second level program to boot from a disk or CD See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ od(1), uname(1), boot(1M), init(1M), kadb(1M), kernel(1M), monitor(1M), reboot(1M), rpc.bootparamd(1M), init.d(4), attributes(5) WARNINGS
The installboot utility fails if the bootblk or openfirmware files do not exist or if the raw disk device is not a character device. 11 Apr 2005 installboot(1M)
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