Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Boot Solaris off of an old external hard drive Post 302468299 by garskoci on Tuesday 2nd of November 2010 09:54:11 AM
Old 11-02-2010
Hello,

When you install Solaris, you should see your disks listed when asked where you want to install the OS.
Other than that, at the "ok" prompt, run the commands "probe-scsi-all" and "show-disks" and set the boot device to the external disk.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

listing directories of an external hard drive

How do I do it? I have a mac and a pc and am having a time cd-ing to the external drive. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: theGooch
2 Replies

2. Solaris

FAT32 usb external hard drive - how to mount??

Hello ! What is the comand to mount and usb hard disk ? I have Solaris 10 installed! 10nx! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: daniel.balasa
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

External SCSI hard drive

Someone gave me a small external SCSI hard drive for my SunOS 5.8 test system. How do I make Unix see the hard drive? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: FredSmith
2 Replies

4. Ubuntu

External Hard drive won't mount

i have a Simple Tech hard drive that i use between two computers. it is formatted to ntfs. i have a dell desktop with Ubuntu 7.10 and Ubuntu 8.04 and Windows XP Home. and i have a laptop with Ubuntu 7.10 and Ubuntu 8.04. the laptop recognizes the hard drive on both 8.04 and 7.10 but my desktop... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Texasone
9 Replies

5. HP-UX

Mounting an external parallel hard drive

Can anyone please walk me through how to mount an external parallel (or scsi) hard drive in visualize C3000 machine? I also would like to mount "/var/sallie" directory in that external drive. My "/var/sallie" directory is running out of space so I would like to mount an external hard drive so that... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sallysallie
0 Replies

6. Solaris

USB External Hard Drive for Solaris 10 Sparc

Hi- I would like to know if anyone has used any USB External Hard Drive, about 500/750GB or 1TB, with any of the Solaris 10 "SPARC" systems. Not on intel nor amd platform. I'm looking for the compatible drive and found a few listed on Sun solaris ready page, but I'd like to have inputs from... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: agfa_109
3 Replies

7. Solaris

Connect an External SCSI Hard Drive to Ultra 80

Guys, I have googled and checked this forum in detail and couldn't find any satisfactory answers for my problem. I am trying to connect a external SCSI hard Drive(Sea Gate) to a Ultra 80. I connected it powered it up and at OK prompt did : boot -r system comes up and complains about not... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ajnabi
6 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Installing UNIX and booting from External Hard Drive

Hello I have a new project being kicked off next month and i should learn UNIX fast. I have never used UNIX before so i have the following questions: 1) Is any UNIX free to install? 2) Can i install and boot UNIX from an External Hard Drive (The system board on my laptop crashed so i took the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pipsonian
2 Replies

9. Ubuntu

How to install Ubuntu11 in external Hard drive

Hi Guys.. I want to install Linux on my portable hard drive. I created a 20GB partition in my hard drive for linux, Now I want to make it bootable mean when I connect it to system n start the system it will start the LINUX and when start without usb-hard drive it should start the windows. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: atul9806
3 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

External hard drive

I have connected an external hard drive. I can't find it. Both ls /media, fdisk -l and ls /dev show nothing. TIA (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Meow613
3 Replies
pfinstall(1M)						  System Administration Commands					     pfinstall(1M)

NAME
pfinstall - tests installation profiles SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/install.d/pfinstall -D | -d disk_config [ -c CDpath] profile DESCRIPTION
After you create a profile, you can use the pfinstall command to test the profile and see if it does what you want before using it to install or upgrade a system. pfinstall enables you to test a profile against: o The system's disk configuration where pfinstall is being run. o Other disks by using a disk configuration file that represents a structure of a disk. See NOTES on how to create a disk configuration file. To successfully and accurately test a profile for a particular Solaris release, you must test a profile within the Solaris environment of the same release. For example, if you want to test a profile for Solaris 2.6, you have to run the pfinstall command on a system running Solaris 2.6. So, on a system running Solaris 2.6, you can test Solaris 2.6 initial installation profiles. However, if you want to test a Solaris 2.6 upgrade profile on a system running a previous version of Solaris, or if you don't have a Solaris 2.6 system installed yet to test Solaris 2.6 initial installation profiles, you have to boot a system from a Solaris 2.6 CD image and temporarily create a Solaris 2.6 install envi- ronment. Then, you can run pfinstall in the Solaris 2.6 install environment to test your profiles. To create a temporary Solaris 2.6 install environment, boot a system from a Solaris 2.6 CD image (just as you would to install), answer any system identification questions, choose the Solaris Interactive Installation program, and exit out of the first screen that is presented. Then, from the shell, you can execute the pfinstall command. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -c CDpath The path to the Solaris 2 installation image. This is required if the image is not mounted on /cdrom. (For example, use this option if you copied the installation image to disk or mounted the CD-ROM on a directory other than /cdrom.) -d disk_config pfinstall uses a disk configuration file, disk_config, to test the profile. See NOTES on how to create a disk configuration file. You must specify either this option or the -D option to test the profile (see WARNINGS). This option cannot be used with an upgrade profile (install_type upgrade). You must always test an upgrade profile against a system's disk configura- tion ( -D option). -D pfinstall uses the system's disk configuration to test the profile. You must specify either this option or the -d option to test the profile (see WARNINGS). OPERANDS
The following operands are supported: profile The file name of the profile to test. If profile is not in the directory where pfinstall is being run, you must specify the path. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Testing an Upgrade Profile The following example tests an upgrade profile, upgrade.prof, on a system with a previous version of the Solaris software installed. 1. Boot the system to be upgraded from the Solaris image chosen for the upgrade, just as you would to install. The image can be located in the system's local CD-ROM or on an install server. 2. Answer the system configuration questions, if prompted. 3. If you are presented with a choice of installation options, choose the Solaris Interactive Installation program. 4. Exit from the first screen of the Solaris Interactive Installation program. After the Solaris Interactive Installation program exits, a shell prompt is displayed. 5. Create a temporary mount point: example# mkdir /tmp/mnt 6. Mount the directory that contains the profile(s) you want to test. If you want to mount a remote NFS file system (for systems on the network), enter: mount -F nfs server_name:path /tmp/mnt If you want to mount a UFS-formatted diskette, enter: mount -F ufs /dev/diskette /tmp/mnt If you want to mount a PCFS-formatted diskette, enter: mount -F pcfs /dev/diskette /tmp/mnt 7. Change directory to /tmp/mnt where the profile resides: example# cd /tmp/mnt 8. Test the upgrade.prof profile: /usr/sbin/install.d/pfinstall -D upgrade.prof Example 2: Testing the basic.prof Profile The following example tests the basic.prof profile against the disk configuration on a Solaris 2.6 system where pfinstall is being run. The path to the Solaris CD image is specified because Volume Management is being used. example# /usr/sbin/install.d/pfinstall -D -c /cdrom/cdrom0/s0 basic.prof Example 3: Testing the basic.prof Profile The following example tests the basic.prof profile against the 535_test disk configuration file. This example uses a Solaris CD image located in the /export/install directory, and pfinstall is being run on a Solaris 2.6 system. example# /usr/sbin/install.d/pfinstall -d 535_test -c /export/install basic.prof EXIT STATUS
0 Successful (system rebooted). 1 Successful (system not rebooted). 2 An error occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWinst | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
fdisk(1M), prtvtoc(1M), attributes(5) Solaris 10 Installation Guide: Basic Installations WARNINGS
If the -d or -D option is not specified, pfinstall may perform an actual installation on the system by using the specified profile, and the data on the system may be overwritten. NOTES
You have to test a profile on a system with the same platform type for which the profile was created. SPARC To create a disk configuration file (-d option) for a SPARC based system: 1. Locate a SPARC based system with a disk that you want to test. 2. Create a disk configuration file by redirecting the output of the prtvtoc(1M) command to a file. example# prtvtoc /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0s2 > 535_disk 3. (Optional.) Concatenate disk configuration files into a single file to test a profile against multiple disks. The target numbers in the disk device names must be unique. example# cat 535_disk 1G_disk > mult_disks x86 To create a disk configuration file (-d option) for an x86 based system: 1. Locate an x86 based system with a disk that you want to test. 2. Create part of the disk configuration file by saving the output of the fdisk(1M) command to a file: example# fdisk -R -W 535_disk /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0p0 3. Append the output of the prtvtoc(1M) command to the disk configuration file. example# prtvtoc /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0s2 >> 535_disk 4. (Optional.) Concatenate disk configuration files into a single file to test a profile against multiple disks. The target numbers in the disk device names must be unique. example# cat 535_disk 1G_disk > mult_disks To test a profile with a specific system memory size, set SYS_MEMSIZE to the specific memory size (in Mbytes) before running pfinstall: example# SYS_MEMSIZE=memory_size example# export SYS_MEMSIZE SunOS 5.10 28 Jan 2003 pfinstall(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:10 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy