Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Sunfire 280R Solaris 5.9 booting Post 302281589 by lamoul on Thursday 29th of January 2009 06:43:47 AM
Old 01-29-2009
thank you very muché1
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

pls help urgently....for SUNfire 280R

hi, i hv received SUNfire 280R system ........for its initial configuration i want to connect to it through hyperterminal from the windows system..........i hv got one serial port to RJ-45 port converter with the system............can anybody tell me the normal console cable which is used to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: girish_shukla
3 Replies

2. Solaris

how to do live upgrade from solaris8 to 9 for sunfire 280R?

hi!!!!!! how to upgrade sunfire 280R server from solaris8 to solaris9? pls help me. Thanks & Regards -Vishal (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Vishal Shroff
1 Replies

3. Solaris

Sunfire 280R Can't Recognize Floppy Drive

Greetings all, I'm in a bit of a situation. I have this Sunfire 280R system that did not have a floppy drive in it, yet we needed one. We grabbed one from another Sun box we had laying around unused, and installed it. The system couldnt recognize it. Tried another floppy drive (non-sun) and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: snackiesmores
4 Replies

4. Solaris

Sunfire 280R disks ?

Hi there Does anybody know what the biggest capacity disk I can get into a Sunfire 280R I currently have two 73gb disks , but I need to get these up to the biggest available Any help would be greatly appreciated (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
4 Replies

5. Solaris

replacing root disk SunFire 280R

Hi, We had a disk go bad in this SunFire 280R, running Solaris 8 - Generic_117350-46. We replaced the disk and partitioned it. We metadetached all the metadevices but for some reason the new disk is showing up in the metadb as Concat/Stripe and it won't let us re-sync the mirror. We are not... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mgb
2 Replies

6. Solaris

Install Network component on Sunfire 280R Solaris 5.9

hi, i just completed installing O/S 5.9 on Sunfire 280R with O/S 5.9. During installation, i wasn't able to add IP, Default gateway, NDS and netmask because the lan port wasn't not active yet. Now that i have a lan port active, how to add network components onto the system? I did ifconfig to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lamoul
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Patch update on sunfire 280R sparc for solaris 5.9

Hi, i just finished installing solaris 5.9 and I'm looking for the tools to tell me if i should update the patches or how to make sure that the current patches are ok? thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lamoul
2 Replies

8. Solaris

Install SUN O/S 5.9 on Sparc Sunfire 280R

Hi, I' trying to install O/S 5.9 on Sparc system Sunfire 280R. I downloaded CD install and CD 2 from Sun Website but later i dowloaded CD 2 that i forgot for my installation. All CD are in ISO formats. I boot system at OK prompt then issue OK boot cdrom when it asks for CD 1, i removed... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: lamoul
7 Replies

9. Hardware

Updating OBP on a Sun Sunfire 280R

Hi, I'm a newbie in the Unix world... :confused: I own a Sun Sunfire 280R computer with one 750Mhz CPU. I ordered two CPU of 900Mhz to replace it; however in the Service manual from Sun I read that to use 900Mhz CPU i will need to have a OBP of at least version 4.5.16. When I type .version in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Monkey114
2 Replies

10. Hardware

SunFire 280R maintenance LED is on and no display

I got the system couple of days back from one of my friend. Last night I turned it on and I noticed that maintenance LED is on. At the same time I added an LCD monitor via VGA and nothing was showing on the screen. Though the system does not have any HDD So not sure if system will even show a BIOS... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pgirish007
3 Replies
growfs(1M)                                                System Administration Commands                                                growfs(1M)

NAME
growfs - non-destructively expand a UFS file system SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/growfs [-M mount-point] [newfs-options] [raw-device] DESCRIPTION
growfs non-destructively expands a mounted or unmounted UNIX file system (UFS) to the size of the file system's slice(s). Typically, disk space is expanded by first adding a slice to a metadevice, then running the growfs command. When adding space to a mirror, you expand each submirror before expanding the file system. growfs will ``write-lock'' (see lockfs(1M)) a mounted file system when expanding. The length of time the file system is write-locked can be shortened by expanding the file system in stages. For instance, to expand a 1 Gbyte file system to 2 Gbytes, the file system can be grown in 16 Mbyte stages using the -s option to specify the total size of the new file system at each stage. The argument for -s is the number of sectors, and must be a multiple of the cylinder size. Note: The file system cannot be grown if a cylinder size of less than 2 is specified. Refer to the newfs(1M) man page for information on the options available when growing a file system. growfs displays the same information as mkfs during the expansion of the file system. If growfs is aborted, recover any lost free space by unmounting the file system and running the fsck command, or run the growfs command again. OPTIONS
Root privileges are required for all of the following options. -M mount-point The file system to be expanded is mounted on mount-point. File system locking (lockfs) will be used. newfs-options The options are documented in the newfs man page. raw-device Specifies the name of a raw metadevice or raw special device, residing in /dev/md/rdsk, or /dev/rdsk, respectively, including the disk slice, where you want the file system to be grown. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Expanding nonmetadevice slice for /export file system The following example expands a nonmetadevice slice for the /export file system. In this example, the existing slice, /dev/dsk/c1t0d0s3, is converted to a metadevice so additional slices can be concatenated. # metainit -f d8 2 1 c1t0d0s3 1 c2t0d0s3 # umount /export Example 2: Associate /export with new metadevice Edit the /etc/vfstab file to change the entry for /export to the newly defined metadevice, d8. # mount /export # growfs -M /export /dev/md/rdsk/d8 The first example starts by running the metainit command with the -f option to force the creation of a new concatenated metadevice d8, which consists of the existing slice /dev/dsk/c1t0d0s3 and a new slice /dev/dsk/c2t0d0s3. Next, the file system on /export must be unmounted. The /etc/vfstab file is edited to change the entry for /export to the newly defined metadevice name, rather than the slice name. After the file system is remounted, the growfs command is run to expand the file system. The file system will span the entire metade- vice when growfs completes. The -M option enables the growfs command to expand a mounted file system. During the expansion, write access for /export is suspended until growfs unlocks the file system. Read access is not affected, though access times are not kept when the lock is in effect. Example 3: Dynamic Expansion of /export file system The following example picks up from the previous one. Here, the /export file system mounted on metadevice d8 is dynamically expanded. # metattach d8 c0t1d0s2 # growfs -M /export /dev/md/rdsk/d8 This example begins by using the metattach command to dynamically concatenate a new slice, /dev/dsk/c0t1d0s2, to the end of an existing metadevice, d8. Next, the growfs command specifies that the mount-point is /export and that it is to be expanded onto the raw metadevice /dev/md/rdsk/d8. The file system will span the entire metadevice when growfs completes. During the expansion, write access for /export is suspended until growfs unlocks the file system. Read access is not affected, though access times are not kept when the lock is in effect. Example 4: Expanding mounted file system to existing mirror The following example expands a mounted file system /files, to an existing mirror, d80, which contains two submirrors, d9 and d10. # metattach d9 c0t2d0s5 # metattach d10 c0t3d0s5 # growfs -M /files /dev/md/rdsk/d80 In this example, the metattach command dynamically concatenates the new slices to each submirror. The metattach command must be run for each submirror. The mirror will automatically grow when the last submirror is dynamically concatenated. The mirror will grow to the size of the smallest submirror. The growfs command then expands the file system. The growfs command specifies that the mount-point is /files and that it is to be expanded onto the raw metadevice /dev/md/rdsk/d80. The file system will span the entire mirror when the growfs command completes. During the expansion, write access for the file system is suspended until growfs unlocks the file system. Read access is not affected, though access times are not kept when the lock is in effect. EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWmdu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
fsck(1M), lockfs(1M), mkfs(1M), metattach(1M), newfs(1M), attributes(5) Solaris Volume Manager Administration Guide LIMITATIONS
Only UFS file systems (either mounted or unmounted) can be expanded using the growfs command. Once a file system is expanded, it cannot be decreased in size. The following conditions prevent you from expanding file systems: When acct is activated and the accounting file is on the target device. When C2 security is activated and the logging file is on the target file system. When there is a local swap file in the target file system. When the file system is root (/), /usr, or swap. SunOS 5.10 9 Dec 2003 growfs(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:53 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy