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Full Discussion: not able to boot from cdrom
Operating Systems Solaris not able to boot from cdrom Post 302272213 by Sun Fire on Tuesday 30th of December 2008 01:52:13 AM
Old 12-30-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by kumarmani
Thanks Dear,

I tried the CD and its working fine in another system.

i tried all the devalias option with boot however no help.

i an enter into OS and listed the /dev/dsk and got the below as output

c0t0d# c0t1d# and c0t2d# then in the /dev/rdsk i tried listing each of them and can see two as
ide@3/dad@0,0:a
ide@3/sd@1,0:a
ide@3/dad@2,0:a

i think second is the path to cdrom . am i correct? if yes then how should i set the alias as the above on OK prompt

first type "format" so that you can know which one is the cdrom.

second step, you can simply type the whole path

see you have /cdrom@0,0:f or /cdrom@1,0:f or /cdrom@2,0:f

you can try all of them, one by one:

Code:
ok boot /pci@1f,0/pci@1,1/ide@3/cdrom@0,0: f
ok boot /pci@1f,0/pci@1,1/ide@3/cdrom@2,0: f


but when you typed "ls -l /dev/rdsk/ are you sure you got the same path ? like ../pci@1,1/ide@3 <== it was always like this ? on the same bus ?

Last edited by Sun Fire; 12-30-2008 at 02:59 AM..
 

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DEVFS.CONF(5)						      BSD File Formats Manual						     DEVFS.CONF(5)

NAME
devfs.conf -- boot-time devfs configuration information DESCRIPTION
The devfs.conf file provides an easy way to set ownership and permissions, or create links for devices available at boot. It does not work for devices plugged in and out after the system is up and running, e.g. USB devices. See devfs.rules(5) for setting owner- ship and permissions for all device nodes, and devd.conf(5) for actions to be taken when devices are attached or detached. Lines starting with a hash sign ('#') and empty lines are ignored. The lines that specify devfs.conf rules consist of three parameters sepa- rated by whitespace: action The action to take for the device. The action names are only significant to the first unique character. devname The name of the device created by devfs(5). arg The argument of the action. The actions currently supported are: link This action creates a symbolic link named arg that points to devname, the name of the device created by devfs(5). own This action changes the ownership of devname. The arg parameter must be in the form of an owner:group pair, in the same format used by chown(8). perm This action changes the permissions of devname. The arg parameter must be a mode as explained in chmod(1). FILES
/etc/devfs.conf /usr/share/examples/etc/devfs.conf EXAMPLES
To create a /dev/cdrom link that points to the first SCSI(4) CD-ROM, the following may be added to devfs.conf: link cd0 cdrom Similarly, to link /dev/cdrom to the first ATAPI CD-ROM device, the following action may be used: link acd0 cdrom To set the owner of a device, the own action may be specified: own cd0 root:cdrom To set the permissions of a device, a perm action should be used: perm cd0 0660 SEE ALSO
chmod(1), devd.conf(5), devfs(5), devfs.rules(5), chown(8) AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Roland Smith <rsmith@xs4all.nl>. BSD
May 17, 2005 BSD
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