Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris How to use FORMAT and PARTITION command on Solaris 9 Post 302144868 by panchpan on Saturday 10th of November 2007 11:28:03 PM
Old 11-11-2007
Thanks a lot - Its resolved now :-) Please help me in knowing few basic questions.

1) How to create more than 7 partitions?
2) Slice 9 seems to be unassigned. But I am not able to allocate 9 - It says '9' is not expected as shown below:

Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks
0 root wm 524 - 2482 15.01GB (1959/0/0) 31471335
1 swap wu 1 - 523 4.01GB (523/0/0) 8401995
2 backup wm 0 - 17831 136.60GB (17832/0/0) 286471080
3 usr wm 2484 - 6400 30.01GB (3917/0/0) 62926605
4 usr wm 2485 - 3790 10.00GB (1306/0/0) 20980890
5 usr wm 2486 - 5096 20.00GB (2611/0/0) 41945715
6 usr wm 2487 - 5097 20.00GB (2611/0/0) 41945715
7 usr wm 2488 - 5098 20.00GB (2611/0/0) 41945715
8 boot wu 0 - 0 7.84MB (1/0/0) 16065
9 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0

partition> 9
`9' is not expected.


3) How to give different names in 'Tag'?
4) How to know actually, How much size can be distributed among user defined partitions?
5) On solaris, How do we actually verify IF mirroring is in place?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

format fat partition in unix

I got a FAT partition mounted as /mnt, as I believed you only can mount partitions when they are formated, but when I want to copy a file to the /mnt partition I only get errors...should I format it or do I have to change settings? I only can work through the "WebMin" (a GREAT TOOL!) cause I'm... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: NaRtHeXs
2 Replies

2. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

re-partition disks on solaris

hi all, i was wondering if i have some volume manager and i want to format all partitions/disks and re-create new slices can i use regular format command or what? i think veritas volume manager is already installed. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bashar
2 Replies

3. Solaris

Solaris 8 partition - compression

Hi, Anyone know if I have a mount point /data , can it turn on compression like what the MS Windows does ???? Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: civic2005
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to merge solaris partition

I m using solaris 8. I have some free space on my hard disk. I want to merge that space into /export/home. Please tell me complete procedure for doing it. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: mansoorulhaq
7 Replies

5. Linux

problem to format linux partition

hi friends one week ago, i have installed fedoa 9 on my home pc. i already have windows xp on that machine. unfortunately my windows xp has corrupted. again i want to install windows xp but it is not installing. will i format my linux partition or some other option is there. please help me... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: praneshmishra08
0 Replies

6. Red Hat

Help me to format partition

Dear all! I'm reading to install Oracle 10g using ASM in single Database on RHEL 5. The only one hard-disk was 320gb on this machine, so, I just want to device the un-formatted disk into 4 raws device. http://gi132.photobucket.com/groups/q34/Q42288CMBQ/1.jpg ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: trantuananh24hg
2 Replies

7. Solaris

Partition overlaps another partition while creating new parition in solaris

hi all while formatting hard disk i am getting following error. Partition 1 ends at 266338338 It must be between 34 and 143374704. label error: EFI Labels do not support overlapping partitions Partition 8 overlaps partition 1. Warning: error writing EFI. Label failed. I have formatted the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikhil kasar
2 Replies

8. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Can I format a partition in Linux with FAT32 or NTFS?

I tried in fedora 9 to format a partition with FAT32 or NTFS but failed mkfs -t NTFS /dev/sdb3 mkfs -t FAT32 /dev/sdb3 In both the output says the the device isn't present. the output is something like this: mkfs.FAT32: no device present mkfs.NTFS: no device present I am able to format in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravisingh
2 Replies

9. Solaris

Solaris 10 Sparc. How to change Vendor info of SAN disks reported in "format" command?

Greetings! After block level migration using an external appliance, the luns are getting reported as DGC-RAID5 and these luns are infact from the new storage. I have a query on changing the device Vendor info from DGC-RAID5 to HP3par in the format o/p only. AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS: ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: n_Bhaskar
3 Replies
swapon(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 swapon(8)

NAME
swapon - Specifies additional disk partitions for paging and swapping SYNOPSIS
/sbin/swapon [-asv] [-s special-device] [-v special-device] DESCRIPTION
The swapon command is used to specify additional disk partitions for paging and swapping. A paging partition is a block special device. ( Tru64 UNIX does not currently support paging and swapping to a regular file. All paging and swapping areas must be block special devices.) The swapon command uses a priority default of 4 for block special devices. Calls to swapon normally occur in the system multiuser state initialization. When you make more swap space available with the command, the additional swap space is available until the system is rebooted. To make additional swap space permanent, you must specify the swap device entry in the /etc/sysconfigtab file. The swapon command flags can override the partition specifications in the /etc/sysconfigtab file. You can use Logical Storage Manager (LSM) volumes for additional swap space. For high system availability, you can mirror the LSM volumes. The Logical Storage Manager manual describes how to use the command to configure an LSM mirrored volume as additional swap space. There are two strategies for swap space allocation: immediate mode and deferred or over-commitment mode. The two strategies differ in the point in time at which swap space is allocated. If immediate mode is used, swap space is allocated when modifiable virtual address space is created. If deferred mode is used, swap space is not allocated until the system needs to write a modified virtual page to swap space. Immediate mode is the default swap space allocation strategy. Immediate mode is more conservative than deferred mode because each modifiable virtual page is assigned a page of swap space when it is created. If you use the immediate mode of swap space allocation, you must allocate a swap space that is at least as large as the total amount of modifiable virtual address space that will be created on your system. Immediate mode requires significantly more swap space than deferred mode because it guarantees that there will be enough swap space if every modifiable virtual page is modified. If you use the deferred mode of swap space allocation, you must estimate the total amount of virtual address space that will be both cre- ated and modified, and compare that total amount with the size of your system's physical memory. If this total amount is greater than the size of physical memory, the swap space must be large enough to hold the modified virtual pages that do not fit into your physical memory. If your system's workload is complex and you are unable to estimate the appropriate amount of swap space by using this mode, you should first use the default amount of swap space and adjust the swap space as needed. To determine which swap space allocation mode is being used, check the setting of the vm-swap-eager parameter in /etc/sysconfigtab. If it is either not specified or set to 1, the system uses immediate swap mode. If it is set to 0 (zero), the system uses deferred mode. FLAGS
Installs all paging partitions specified in the /etc/sysconfigtab file. Displays swap space utilization. For each swap partition, this flag displays the total amount of allocated swap space, the amount of swap space that is being used, and the amount of free swap space. Generates verbose output. NOTES
There is no way to stop paging and swapping on a partition. It is therefore not possible to use swap devices that can be dismounted during system operation. Swap space is also used during a system crash dump. In planning your swap space allocation you should also consider your crash dump requirements. See the System Administration for information on crash dumps. EXAMPLES
The following example shows a swap device entry in an /etc/sysconfigtab file: vm: swapdevice=/dev/disk/dsk0b,/dev/disk/dsk1b The following command adds the /dev/disk/dsk0b block device file as swap space: swapon /dev/disk/dsk0b ERRORS
You may receive the following messages when using the swapon command: special-device or an overlapping partition is open. Quitting... This message indicates that you tried to add a partition as a swap device that is actively in use by UFS, AdvFS, swap, or LSM. spe- cial-device is marked in use for fstype in the disklabel. If you continue with the operation you can possibly destroy existing data. CONTINUE? [y/n] This message indicates that you tried to use a partition as a swap device that is not currently in active use but is marked for use in the disk label's partition map. For example, the partition may be part of an LSM volume or an AdvFS domain. If you know that the partition you specified to swapon does not contain any data, you can choose to override the warning. In this case, the fstype in the disk label will be modified to swap. Note that you can use the disklabel -s command to set the fstype in the disk label to unused for partitions that do not contain any valid data. See disklabel(8) for more information. Partition(s) which overlap special-device are marked in use. If you continue with the operation you can possibly destroy existing data. CONTINUE? [y/n] This message indicates that the partition you specified is not marked for use, but other, overlapping partitions on the disk are marked for use. If you override this warning, the fstype in the disk's label will be modified. The partition you specified to swapon will be marked as in use as a swap device and all overlapping partitions will be marked UNUSED. The following examples illustrate these messages: Adding a partition that is marked for use as a swap device: # /usr/sbin/swapon /dev/disk/dsk11g /dev/disk/dsk11g disk is marked in use for LSMpubl in the disklabel. If you continue with the operation you can possibly destroy existing data. CONTINUE? [y/n] Partition g of disk dsk11 is part of a disk marked for use by LSM. If LSM is not actively using this partition and the partition does not contain any data, you may want to override this warning, by answering y. In this case, partition g will be marked as swap in the disk label. Adding a partition as a swap device whose overlapping partitions are marked for use: # /usr/sbin/swapon /dev/disk/dsk11c Partition(s) which overlap /dev/disk/dsk11c are marked in use. If you continue with the operation you can possibly destroy existing data. CONTINUE? [y/n] If you answer yes, partition c on disk dsk11 will be marked swap in the disk label and all partitions that overlap c will be marked UNUSED. Adding a partition that is currently in use as a swap device: # /usr/sbin/swapon /dev/disk/dsk11g /dev/disk/dsk11g or an overlapping partition is open. Quitting... Adding a partition that does not have a disk label as a swap device: # /usr/sbin/swapon /dev/disk/dsk11c The disklabel for /dev/disk/dsk11c does not exist or is corrupted. Quitting... See disklabel(8) for information on installing a disk label on a disk. FILES
Specifies the command path. Specifies information about file systems and swap devices. RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: swapon(2), savecore(8) System Administration delim off swapon(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:06 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy