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Full Discussion: Disk creation
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Disk creation Post 302921453 by rbatte1 on Friday 17th of October 2014 07:09:17 AM
Old 10-17-2014
Hello Rossdba,

The format command works with the physical disks in your server and directly cabled to your server or provided by a SAN (usually over fibre or iSCSI) but the OS sees all of these as just physical disks with appropriate size and characteristics.

I don't have a Solaris server any more, but can you do the following for us:-
  • Start the format command with no options or anything fed into it. It should put you in a menu.
  • Select disk zero (the only one you have)
  • Select option p for the partition menu
  • Select option p to print the table.
  • Paste this bit of output into the thread in CODE tags
  • Exit (q twice I think)
It would also be useful to have the output of df -k (again in CODE tags) so we can see what has been assigned to where.

If you have other filesystems that you mount as required, could you also post the content of /etc/fstab (or is it ufstab or vfstab) to make sure we don't risk overwriting something.



Thanks, in advance,
Robin
 

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USERMOUNT(1)						      General Commands Manual						      USERMOUNT(1)

NAME
usermount - A graphical tool to mount, unmount and format filesystems. SYNOPSIS
usermount [ options ] DESCRIPTION
usermount is a graphical tool to allow users to easily manage removable media, such as floppy disks or zip disks. When the tool starts up, it scans /etc/fstab for all filesystems that have been configured to allow users to mount and unmount them. The filesystem can be mounted or unmounted by pressing the toggle button labeled Mount. Also, if the user has the appropriate permissions for the device, the Format button will be active. This allows the user to format disks using fdformat and create a new filesystem of the type listed (using mkfs with the appropriate option). Naturally, the user will be prompted for confirmation before actually destroying data on the device. Note that if a device is already mounted, the format button is inactive for all entries that share the same device. When run as root, usermount displays all of the entries in /etc/fstab rather than just the ones with the user option. OPTIONS
This program has no command line options of it's own, but it does take the standard X program options like -display and such. See the X(1) man page for some of the common options. FILES
/etc/fstab The system file describing the mountable filesystems. SEE ALSO
mount(8), fdformat(8), mkfs(8), fstab(5) X(1) BUGS
Mount entries with a filesystem type of iso9660 are outright considered CD-ROMs and the format button is always disabled. Mount entries for swap files or partitions are also ignored. A nice feature might be to allow root to turn swap on and off for swap parti- tions. AUTHOR
Otto Hammersmith <otto@redhat.com> Red Hat Software 3 October 1997 USERMOUNT(1)
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