08-04-2010
Using ZFS is quite easy as you just attach yr disk to yr pool , without ZFS , then try Disk Suite which is somewhat complicated !
Brian
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1. Solaris
Hello,
I am trying to do mirror in solaris 9. I have total 0-7 disks
4 5 6 7
0 1 2 3
Drive 0 and Drive 4 = Boot Drives
Need to Mirror following drives.
Drive 1 and Drive 5 = Need to mirror
Drive 1 was mounted on: /prod1, /prod2, /prod3, /prod4, /prod5.
Then i... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: deal732
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2. Solaris
Hi,
am a newbie at solaris. Need advice and help on this.
1) How do I break the mirror between 2 hard disks. (wish to keep 1 good hard disk as backup)
2) After remove 1 hard disk and put in new hard disk, how do I initialise or fomat the new hard disk?
3) How do I put back the backup... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: chongkls77
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3. Solaris
I have two 72GB disks that are mirrored and mounted (/backup). I have a 18GB drive in an array I just attached to the server, which is running Solaris 9.
I need to create a new logical volume partition and make the existing mirror device (/dev/md/dsk/d34) and the array's 18GB drive a member of... (3 Replies)
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a question regarding finding free space on the disk of a solaris machine.
Many mount points are available in my machine. Right now i am using
df -b option to get the free disk space available.
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5. Solaris
Hi everyone,
Normally it always easier in Sparc machine, i can set or manually use the boot-device in NVram to boot the mirrored disk. However I have a big trouble about x86 mirror for a long time. I have been doing anything i can: search document, google, ask the others.
Recently i did as... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: tien86
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6. Solaris
Hello:
I have a machine built on 2 drives and mirrors have been created to a second set of 2 drives (4 total) on the same platform. SVM.
Might anyone provide guidance to create a second machine by breaking the mirrored set, moving the two mirrors (2) to another machine (same platform type),... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: 4dailyrunner
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7. Solaris
I’m setting up a boot disk mirror on Solaris 10 x86. I’m used to doing it on SPARC, where you can copy the partition table using fmthard. My x86 boot disk has 2 primary partitions, a Solaris one and a diagnostic one. Is there a way to copy those 2 primary partitions to the second disk without... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: TKD
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8. Solaris
hi friends, need help.. it is my first time patching using mirror disk backup approach, not so sure about the steps :confused: how do you detach, patch it, boot it and reattach it ? any kind soul here can advise ? thanks in advance..:)
below is the information from my machine:
Filesystem ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Exposure
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9. HP-UX
what is the difference between DRD and Root Mirror Disk using LVM mirror ? (3 Replies)
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10. Solaris
We have Proliant DL380 G2 running Solaris 9 x86
There are 6 physical disks installed which I believe are mirrored at hardware level to 3 sets to present 3 disks to the OS.
Is there any way to check the mirror status at OS level ?
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UEFI(8) BSD System Manager's Manual UEFI(8)
NAME
UEFI -- Unified Extensible Firmware Interface bootstrapping procedures
DESCRIPTION
The UEFI Unified Extensible Firmware Interface provides boot- and run-time services to operating systems. UEFI is a replacement for the
legacy BIOS on the i386 and amd64 CPU architectures, and is also used on arm64 and ia64.
The UEFI boot process loads system bootstrap code located in an EFI System Partition (ESP). The ESP is a GPT or MBR partition with a spe-
cific identifier that contains an msdosfs(5) FAT file system with a specified file hierarchy.
Partition Scheme ESP Identifier
GPT C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
MBR 0xEF
The UEFI boot process proceeds as follows:
1. UEFI firmware runs at power up and searches for an OS loader in the EFI system partition. The path to the loader may be set by an
EFI environment variable. If not set, the default is /EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI. The default UEFI boot configuration for FreeBSD
installs boot1.efi as /EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI.
2. boot1.efi locates the first partition with the type freebsd-ufs, and from it loads loader.efi.
3. loader.efi loads and boots the kernel, as described in loader(8).
The vt(4) system console is automatically selected when booting via UEFI.
FILES
/boot/boot1.efi
First stage UEFI bootstrap
/boot/boot1.efifat
msdosfs(5) FAT file system image containing boot1.efi for use by bsdinstall(8) and the bootcode argument to gpart(8).
/boot/loader.efi
Final stage bootstrap
/boot/kernel/kernel
default kernel
/boot/kernel.old/kernel
typical non-default kernel (optional)
SEE ALSO
vt(4), msdosfs(5), boot(8), gpart(8)
HISTORY
UEFI boot support first appeared in FreeBSD 10.1.
AUTHORS
UEFI boot support was developed by Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org>, Ed Maste <emaste@FreeBSD.org>, and Nathan Whitehorn
<nwhitehorn@FreeBSD.org>. The FreeBSD Foundation sponsored portions of the work.
CAVEATS
EFI environment variables are not supported by loader(8) or the kernel.
boot1.efi loads loader.efi from the first FreeBSD-UFS file system it locates, even if it is on a different disk.
boot1.efi cannot load loader.efi from a ZFS(8) file system. As a result, UEFI does not support a typical root file system on ZFS configura-
tion.
BSD
October 17, 2014 BSD