Hi All.
I am pretty new when it comes to Linux. My admin left on vacation and has presented 2 new disks to the server but they won't be seen until I can reboot the box this weekend.
Once that happens I need the steps to make it available to my server and mount them as new filesystems. One will be for oracle data and the other for backup data.
Can anyone provide me with the steps neeed to complete this?
Here is some info I have on the current setup:
i am using Interactive Unix 4.1.1 and i have a disk from a another unix machine which is Unix Slackware 2.1 i'm having problem mounting the disk. it gives me an error message, ??? is there any solution to this ???
it say the disk has invalid file system (1 Reply)
I have connected up second hard drive to my Sparcstation5, touched /reconfigure. and now would like to know how to mount the hard drive. I am trying to access /etc/passwd file on second disk to change root passwd but after connecting drive; touching reconfigure. don't know how to go about accessing... (2 Replies)
Hi Engg. ! :mad:
I have a harddisk on which SCO UNIX Open Server was installed. There was some data (in .dbf format) on it. Present condition of HDD is that it is not booting. Now I want to mount this HDD through other HDD on which SCO UNIX Open Server is installed by attaching... (0 Replies)
hi,
is that possible?
i installed one disk of a old rs/6000 in a linux machine.
the problem seems to be the partition layout.
linux fdisk tells me that aix disklabels are not supported,
so the problem seems to be the partition layout, not the filesystem.
does anybody know a way to access... (1 Reply)
Hi once more :p
Yesterday I reinstalled Solaris OS and now I can not mount pcfs HDD
SunOS unknown 5.10 Generic_142901-03 i86pc i386 i86pc
and what has been added in /etc/vfstab is
/dev/dsk/c1t0d0p1:c - /podaci - pcfs - yes rw
But as I said , my disk is... (4 Replies)
Can someone please help me out here.
I have SunSolaris server that has a ridiculous about of space on it. several hundred gigabytes of space. There are lots of partitions on this server that has at least 100Gs on them.
I want to mount just one of these partitions on my Linux server so I can... (4 Replies)
I am using Solaris 10. I have a raw device attached to my system which is
/dev/md/rdsk/d91
I want to mount this as a disk with file system on a mount point /u05.
Actually this raw device was earlier part of Oracle ASM. Now I have removed this disk from ASM, and want to use it as normal... (3 Replies)
I wasn't sure where to put this thread but since i use ubuntu for data recovery, I figured this is the best place. So, a friend passed me a 250G Western Digital hard disk the other day and said that his client needs to get her pictures off it. the problem: windows says it wants to reformat the... (13 Replies)
Dear Experts,
My buissness requierment is to place some automated files in Windows server, Now Can you help me to map the Windows folder into Linux server.
Windows Details:-windows 2003
Linux Details:-
$ uname -a
Linux testdb.mawarid.local 2.6.9-55.ELsmp #1 SMP Fri Apr 20 16:36:54 EDT 2007... (3 Replies)
Hi Folks -
I need to mount a Windows Share to a Linux server. What is the best/easiest way to do this?
Is this 'how-to' guide accurate:
How to Share Files Between Windows and Linux
Or is there a better method you could share?
Thanks! (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: SIMMS7400
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
scsi-spin
scsi-spin(8) System Manager's Manual scsi-spin(8)NAME
scsi-spin - spin up and down a SCSI device
SYNOPSIS
scsi-spin [-options...] [device]
DESCRIPTION
scsi-spin let the user to manually spin up and down a SCSI device.
This command is particularly useful if you've got noisy (or hot) drives in a machine that you rarely need to access. This is not the same
as the kernel patch that's floating around that will automatically spin down the drive after some time. scsi-spin is completely manual,
and spinning down a drive that's in use, especially the one containing the scsi-spin binary, is probably a really bad idea.
To avoid running in trouble with such cases, scsi-spin verifies that the device to work on is not currently in use by scanning the mounted
file system description file for a partition living on it and issue an error if this the case.
OPTIONS -u, --up
spin up device.
-d, --down
spin down device.
-e, --loej
load or eject medium from drive (use along with -u or -d )
-w, --wait=[n]
wait up to n seconds for the spin up/down command to complete. Default is to return immediately after the command was sent to the
device. Either repeat -w n times or set n to define the time to wait before to report a timeout.
-l, --lock
prevent removal of medium from device.
-L, --unlock
allow removal of medium from device.
-I, --oldioctl
use legacy ioctl interface instead of SG_IO to dialog with device (could not be supported on all platforms). -e and -w are not
allowed with this option.
-v, --verbose=[n]
verbose mode. Either repeat -v or set n accordingly to increase verbosity. 1 is verbose, 2 is debug (dump SCSI commands and Sense
buffer).
-f, --force
force spinning up/down the device even if it is in use.
-n, --noact
do nothing but check if the device is in use.
-p, --proc
use /proc/mounts instead of /etc/mtab to determine if the device is in use or not.
device the device is any name in the filesystem which points to a SCSI block device (sd, scd) or generic SCSI device (sg). See section
below.
SCSI devices naming convention
Old kernel naming convention
It is typically /dev/sd[a-z] , /dev/scd[0-9]* or /dev/sg[0-9]*.
scsidev naming convention
It is typically /dev/scsi/s[rdg]h[0-9]*-e????c?i?l? or /dev/scsi/<aliasname>.
devfs naming convention
It is typically /dev/scsi/host[0-9]/bus[0-9]/target[0-9]/lun[0-9]/disc (same for cd and generic devices) or short name
/dev/sd/c[0-9]b[0-9]t[0-9]u[0-9] when devfsd "new compatibility entries" naming scheme is enabled.
SEE ALSO scsiinfo(8), sg_start(8), sd(4), proc(5),
AUTHORS
Eric Delaunay <delaunay@debian.org>, 2001
Rob Browning <rlb@cs.utexas.edu>, 1998
03 September 2001 scsi-spin(8)