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Operating Systems Solaris Hard Drive Copy results in differences on boot Post 302502280 by ddogarmyman on Monday 7th of March 2011 02:31:45 PM
Old 03-07-2011
Hard Drive Copy results in differences on boot

I have an old Pentium 4 PC running Solaris 9. The system has two 40gig IDE hard drives. I removed the drives and, using a hard disk duplicating device, "cloned" both drives. I installed the new drives in the PC. The system boots but I get a message that X-Term will not run on the console. If I replace the two original drives all is well. The replacement drives are not the exact same model but are the same capacity. Nothing else about this system has changed. I could use some help. Thanks.

---------- Post updated at 02:31 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:49 PM ----------

Oddly, it seems that a KVM switch may be the culprit. I remove it from the equation and all seems to work fine.

This is Solaris 8 by the way, not 9 as I stated originally. I continue to work toward a solid answer.
 

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HD(4)							     Linux Programmer's Manual							     HD(4)

NAME
hd - MFM/IDE hard disk devices DESCRIPTION
The hd* devices are block devices to access MFM/IDE hard disk drives in raw mode. The master drive on the primary IDE controller (major device number 3) is hda; the slave drive is hdb. The master drive of the second controller (major device number 22) is hdc and the slave hdd. General IDE block device names have the form hdX, or hdXP, where X is a letter denoting the physical drive, and P is a number denoting the partition on that physical drive. The first form, hdX, is used to address the whole drive. Partition numbers are assigned in the order the partitions are discovered, and only nonempty, nonextended partitions get a number. However, partition numbers 1-4 are given to the four partitions described in the MBR (the "primary" partitions), regardless of whether they are unused or extended. Thus, the first logi- cal partition will be hdX5. Both DOS-type partitioning and BSD-disklabel partitioning are supported. You can have at most 63 partitions on an IDE disk. For example, /dev/hda refers to all of the first IDE drive in the system; and /dev/hdb3 refers to the third DOS "primary" partition on the second one. They are typically created by: mknod -m 660 /dev/hda b 3 0 mknod -m 660 /dev/hda1 b 3 1 mknod -m 660 /dev/hda2 b 3 2 ... mknod -m 660 /dev/hda8 b 3 8 mknod -m 660 /dev/hdb b 3 64 mknod -m 660 /dev/hdb1 b 3 65 mknod -m 660 /dev/hdb2 b 3 66 ... mknod -m 660 /dev/hdb8 b 3 72 chown root:disk /dev/hd* FILES
/dev/hd* SEE ALSO
chown(1), mknod(1), sd(4), mount(8) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.44 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 1992-12-17 HD(4)
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