Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris New to Solaris (Checking/Adding network and harddisk) Post 302958019 by javanoob on Sunday 18th of October 2015 09:05:50 AM
Old 10-18-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by jlliagre
You should tell what Solaris release you are using, administration tasks changed a lot with Solaris 11. For example creating a "/etc/hostname.e1000g0" file has no effect on Solaris 11.

SPARC systems do not use fdisk partitions so might call disk slices partitions.
x86 systems use fdisk partitions so try to avoid calling slices partitions.
Slices are indeed areas inside the Solaris fdisk partition on x86 while on SPARC, there is no intermediary layer.
EFI (GPT) changed all of that.
ZFS prefer to use whole disks so obsoleted the requirement for multiple partitions/slices.
Hi jlliagre and all,

I am on Solaris 10.

Can I just use devfsadm -Cv to allow detection of the new disks ? I am notallow to reboot the sytem.

Regards,
Noob
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Adding a network printer

I recently added an HP deskjet printer to our Solaris network. I deleted the old printer which this one is replacing. I did everything in Printer Admin. I could think of. The problem now is that when I go to print something out of Star Office, my new printer is not a valid choice from the drop... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: awells
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Adding a Unix Server to a Windows 2000 Network

Hi everyone Firstly I apologise for my total lack of knowledge about UNIX. Its unfortunately something I have never had any exposure to (Until Now). I administer a smallish Windows 2000 network with all the usual bits and pieces that involves, and have been given the task of joining a Unix... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: maestro
3 Replies

3. Solaris

solaris 10 errors mount external usb Harddisk zfs on a nas without cdrom

Hi, I try to mount an external USB HD on a solaris 10 without any success. Machine hardware: i86pc OS version: 5.10 Processor type: i386 Hardware: i86pc The HD is a zfs, but I installed this with a Ubuntu 8.10. iostat -En displays this: --> so the system... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: edubidu
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Network checking while running a script

hi, i am new to this scripting stuff so please help. i need a script that should check network connection while process.bsh is running which connects to a server for some time (e.g. 30 secs to a minute) and I wanted to make sure that network interruption does not happen during this time period... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bun $ ny
2 Replies

5. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Adding subnet on windows network

Hi All, I have a windows network that I need to improve network speed. Unfortunately, it's running on one subnetwork. So I would like to put multi subnet on it. I don't want to put cisco routing and switching yet. I'm new to it and I would like to put linksys router and unmanaged switch for... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: itik
1 Replies

6. Solaris

how to install solaris on portable external harddisk

Hi Fnds, I dont have enough space on my Vista based PC and I want solais to be installed on a portable external hard disk. Can anybody tell me how I can install solaris on external harddisk. cheers :), Vinodky (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vinodky
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Network interface down after adding static route

Please , I have a problem I have add a statis route on Solaris 10, but after this, the network interface of Server was Offline. The system is in cluster mode (3.2) route add -net 10.10.1.128 -netmask 255.255.255.128 10.10.1.51 ------------------- lo0:... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Ruggero
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

need help adding network printer on SVR4

We have a very old and unsupported box. It runs DC/OSx, SVR4. For the past 12 years all printers have been connected via terminal servers and working well. Now those terminal servers are dying and cannot be replaced or repaired. Of course the right solution is to upgrade, but that's not gonna... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: jbcamel
10 Replies

9. AIX

Procedure for adding a new harddisk to a server

how will you add new new HDD to server and explain the HDD installation procedure? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gopikumar
2 Replies
fmthard(1M)															       fmthard(1M)

NAME
fmthard - populate label on hard disks SYNOPSIS
SPARC fmthard -d data | -n volume_name | -s datafile [-i] /dev/rdsk/c? [t?] d?s2 fmthard -d data | -n volume_name | -s datafile [-i] /dev/rdsk/c? [t?] d?s2 The fmthard command updates the VTOC (Volume Table of Contents) on hard disks and, on systems, adds boot information to the Solaris fdisk partition. One or more of the options -s datafile, -d data, or -n volume_name must be used to request modifications to the disk label. To print disk label contents, see prtvtoc(1M). The /dev/rdsk/c?[t?]d?s2 file must be the character special file of the device where the new label is to be installed. On systems, fdisk(1M) must be run on the drive before fmthard. If you are using an system, note that the term ``partition'' in this page refers to slices within the fdisk partition on machines. Do not confuse the partitions created by fmthard with the partitions created by fdisk. The following options are supported: -d data The data argument of this option is a string representing the information for a particular partition in the current VTOC. The string must be of the format part:tag:flag:start:size where part is the partition number, tag is the ID TAG of the partition, flag is the set of permission flags, start is the starting sector number of the partition, and size is the number of sectors in the partition. See the description of the datafile below for more information on these fields. -i This option allows the command to create the desired VTOC table, but prints the information to standard output instead of modifying the VTOC on the disk. -n volume_name This option is used to give the disk a volume_name up to 8 characters long. -s datafile This option is used to populate the VTOC according to a datafile created by the user. If the datafile is "-", fmthard reads from standard input. The datafile format is described below. This option causes all of the disk par- tition timestamp fields to be set to zero. Every VTOC generated by fmthard will also have partition 2, by convention, that corresponds to the whole disk. If the input in datafile does not specify an entry for partition 2, a default partition 2 entry will be created auto- matically in VTOC with the tag V_BACKUP and size equal to the full size of the disk. The datafile contains one specification line for each partition, starting with partition 0. Each line is delimited by a new-line character ( ). If the first character of a line is an asterisk (*), the line is treated as a com- ment. Each line is composed of entries that are position-dependent, separated by "white space" and having the fol- lowing format: partition tag flag starting_sector size_in_sectors where the entries have the following values: partition The partition number. Currently, for Solaris SPARC, a disk can have up to 8 partitions, 0-7. Even though the partition field has 4 bits, only 3 bits are currently used. For , all 4 bits are used to allow slices 0-15. Each Solaris fdisk partition can have up to 16 slices. tag The partition tag: a decimal number. The following are reserved codes: 0 (V_UNASSIGNED), 1 (V_BOOT), 2 (V_ROOT), 3 (V_SWAP), 4 (V_USR), 5 (V_BACKUP), 6 (V_STAND), 7 (V_VAR), and 8 (V_HOME). flag The flag allows a partition to be flagged as unmountable or read only, the masks being: V_UNMNT 0x01, and V_RONLY 0x10. For mountable partitions use 0x00. starting_sector The sector number (decimal) on which the partition starts. size_in_sectors The number (decimal) of sectors occupied by the partition. You can save the output of a prtvtoc command to a file, edit the file, and use it as the datafile argument to the -s option. See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ uname(1), format(1M), prtvtoc(1M), attributes(5) Only fdisk(1M), installgrub(1M) Special care should be exercised when overwriting an existing VTOC, as incorrect entries could result in current data being inaccessible. As a precaution, save the old VTOC. For disks under one terabyte, fmthard cannot write a VTOC on an unlabeled disk. Use format(1M) for this purpose. 11 Apr 2005 fmthard(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:29 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy