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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers / file system mounts as read only Post 302324637 by Tirmazi on Thursday 11th of June 2009 09:20:03 AM
Old 06-11-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tirmazi
I have a Netra T1 server running Solaris 8, It was installed by jump start, it does not have a cdrom drive.

Recetly it crashed so I rebooted it from >LOM poweron
and it came to run level 3, all file systems listed in /etc/vfstab are mounted, but /dev and / root are not writeable though in /etc/vfstab it says file system is read/write.

Any clue please suggest.

thanks

I just wanted to say thanks the issue was infact with the root file system
 

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EJECT(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  EJECT(1)

NAME
eject -- eject a floppy disk, cdrom or tape SYNOPSIS
eject [-fv] [-l | -L | -U] [-t device-type] [-d] device eject -n DESCRIPTION
The eject program ejects a medium from the specified device. It can also load a cdrom in the drive if this operation is supported by the hardware. The device argument specifies a device either by its full path name (identified by a /dev/ prefix), or by one of the built-in nicknames. If the medium contains a file system that is currently mounted, eject will attempt to unmount the file system before ejecting. The following options are available: -d Deprecated. -f Force the eject operation without attempting to unmount any file systems first. -l Load media in the drive (only supported for the cdrom device type). -L Lock the media into the drive (but see BUGS below). -n List the built-in nicknames on standard output. -t device-type Specify the device type. The argument must be one of diskette, floppy, cdrom, disk, or tape. This option is necessary when ejecting a device for which no built-in knowledge is available. -U Unlock the media from the drive. -v Display some of the actions taken on standard output. BUGS
Most disk drivers automatically lock the media on the first open and unlock it on the last close, making 'eject -L' almost useless, since when it closes the device, it gets unlocked again. BSD
October 6, 2001 BSD
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