!!!!
There was some hope for you to recover your data before but I'm afraid you somewhat compromise them with such a questionable command.
You overwrote the first partition by the full disk first 11 MB.
Achenle suggested you to output the dd command to /dev/null. That was to check if the disk was readable. He never suggested to output anything to the disk itself, which is something you should never do when trying to recover data.
Thanks for poiniting my attention to that typo
sorry it was a typing typo , i wasn't capturing the text came from shell
i did'nt do that
acutally i meant
this acutally what i entered in shell
is there still any hope after all
@ilikecows
i can't affored the cost of recovery service the very right now
i'm looking for a cheap software for recovery
Last edited by h@foorsa.biz; 11-28-2010 at 08:11 AM..
Hi There,
I search a lot across the board but didn't find answer... first of all... I installed the Companion CD. So Kde is supposed to work... I ran the script to have it in my login screen, and it's there... but when I enter it, it only kicks me to the login screen once... (1 Reply)
HI All,
I have three solaris disks: disk 1 & 2 and "image" disk.
However, no instructions for installation on x86 came with them. (I downloaded from SUN.)
I've searched far and wide on the net trying to find instructions for installing Solaris on my PII 500 mhz intel machine, but have... (7 Replies)
hi,
need help!
i've installed solaris 9 on my x86 box...problems with kdmconfig. here what i have:
1- Dell 17" Flat monitor ( 31kHz-80kHz horizontal and 56 Hz-76Hz Vertical)
2- Matrox Millenium G550 card
what choices do i have to made?
best regards
thank you in advance (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have installed Solaris 8 on a PC, but I can not get the 2nd CD to install. I can log in to CDE desktop, by the way, is just black and white. I can mount the 2nd install CD, and double-click on the installer, but it does not install. Someting displays in the console and then it disappears... (1 Reply)
Ok here goes, this MCSE is now fed up with MS, they are telling me that my Legal XP has a s/num they didnt issue.
After countless emails I am P with them and am loooking for a new OS.
Tried Linux, got it working but seems too flaky for me.
Have installed Solaris 10 X86 (on a temp pc AMD Athlon... (1 Reply)
OK, I have a DELL Poweredge 2850 fresh out of the box sitting here.
I'm thinking of putting Solaris 9 x86 on it.
Has anyone ever attempted this before, do you think it will work?
I dont want to get into something that is just going to be a enormus waste of time, so I am wondering if anyone... (1 Reply)
I know that Sun make s a version of Solaris for Sparc platforms and also an x86 (Intel/AMD) release of Solaris. Can an application that runs on Solaris/Sparc also run on a PC running the x86 release of Solaris? Would a different release be required or any re-compling of the application?
jim (1 Reply)
Hi admins,
I'm having some issues with a Solaris 10 machine. I just rebooted the box after at least 2 years running smooth and now the OS is not comming up.
This is what I see in the console (if I press Ctrl^D it loops again):
Root password for system maintenance (control-d to bypass): ... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am facing an issue with Solaris x86 machine
Machine Details:
uname -a
SunOS sol10-64 5.10 Generic_137138-09 i86pc i386 i86pc
..............................
Description:
I am trying to register a programm with proramm ID 300760 with version number 1, and tryint to create a... (0 Replies)
First of all, forgive me if I come off as naive. Normally I'm doing day-to-day management of a Server 2008 network, so HP-UX isn't exactly my forte.
We have several HP 715/100 machines running UX 9.x, and recently one of them stopped being able to boot. In the boot menu the disk shows up with... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: GoldnPantaloons
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
prtvtoc
prtvtoc(1M) System Administration Commands prtvtoc(1M)NAME
prtvtoc - report information about a disk geometry and partitioning
SYNOPSIS
prtvtoc [-fhs] [-t vfstab] [-m mnttab] device
DESCRIPTION
The prtvtoc command allows the contents of the label to be viewed. The command can be used only by the super-user.
The device name can be the file name of a raw device in the form of /dev/rdsk/c?t?d?s2 or can be the file name of a block device in the
form of /dev/dsk/c?t?d?s2.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-f Report on the disk free space, including the starting block address of the free space, number of blocks, and unused parti-
tions.
-h Omit the headers from the normal output.
-m mnttab Use mnttab as the list of mounted filesystems, in place of /etc/mnttab.
-s Omit all headers but the column header from the normal output.
-t vfstab Use vfstab as the list of filesystem defaults, in place of /etc/vfstab.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Using the prtvtoc Command
The following example uses the prtvtoc command on a 424-megabyte hard disk:
example# prtvtoc /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0s2
* /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0s2 partition map
*
* Dimension:
* 512 bytes/sector
* 80 sectors/track
* 9 tracks/cylinder
* 720 sectors/cylinder
* 2500 cylinders
* 1151 accessible cylinders
*
* Flags:
* 1: unmountable
* 10: read-only
* * First Sector Last
* Partition Tag Flags Sector Count Sector Mount Directory
0 2 00 0 76320 76319 /
1 3 01 76320 132480 208799
2 5 00 0 828720 828719
5 6 00 208800 131760 340559 /opt
6 4 00 340560 447120 787679 /usr
7 8 00 787680 41040 828719 /export/home
example#
The data in the Tag column above indicates the type of partition, as follows:
Name Number
UNASSIGNED 0x00
BOOT 0x01
ROOT 0x02
SWAP 0x03
USR 0x04
BACKUP 0x05
STAND 0x06
VAR 0x07
HOME 0x08
ALTSCTR 0x09
CACHE 0x0a
RESERVED 0x0b
The data in the Flags column above indicates how the partition is to be mounted, as follows:
Name Number
MOUNTABLE, READ AND WRITE 0x00
NOT MOUNTABLE 0x01
MOUNTABLE, READ ONLY 0x10
Example 2: Using the prtvtoc Command with the -f Option
The following example uses the prtvtoc command with the -f option on a 424-megabyte hard disk:
example# prtvtoc -f /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0s2
FREE_START=0 FREE_SIZE=0 FREE_COUNT=0 FREE_PART=34
Example 3: Using the prtvtoc Command on a Disk Over One Terabyte
The following example uses uses the prtvtoc command on a disk over one terabyte:.
example# prtvtoc /dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s2
* /dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s2 partition map
*
* Dimensions:
* 512 bytes/sector
* 3187630080 sectors
* 3187630013 accessible sectors
*
* Flags:
* 1: unmountable
* 10: read-only
*
* First Sector Last
* Partition Tag Flags Sector Count Sector Mount Directory
0 2 00 34 262144 262177
1 3 01 262178 262144 524321
6 4 00 524322 3187089340 3187613661
8 11 00 3187613662 16384 318763004
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO devinfo(1M), fmthard(1M), format(1M), mount(1M), attributes(5)WARNINGS
The mount command does not check the "not mountable" bit.
SunOS 5.10 25 Jul 2002 prtvtoc(1M)