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Operating Systems Solaris Solaris 8 - Accessing Hard Drives Post 302984600 by ssabet on Friday 28th of October 2016 12:57:44 AM
Old 10-28-2016
Don,

There are two SCSI Hard Drives in the Server: Disk 0 (Primary Disk with Solaris 8 on it) and Disk 1 (Secondary Disk with an Application on it). When I login to the Server as Root and issue the command: ls -la does it show me the files and directories on both Disk 0 and Disk 1 or just Disk 0?

I assumed it showed me the directory structures and files on disk0 only, and not on both since I would have to change and access the other disk 1 to look at its directory structure and files. Is this assumption correct?

I'm thinking it's like changing between drive A: and drive B: on a PC. Is this the same way in Solaris OS?

I'm new to Solaris and sorry for asking you basic questions.
 

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DISKTYPE(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					       DISKTYPE(1)

NAME
disktype -- disk format detector SYNOPSIS
disktype file... DESCRIPTION
The purpose of disktype is to detect the content format of a disk or disk image. It knows about common file systems, partition tables, and boot codes. USAGE
disktype can be run with any number of regular files or device special files as arguments. They will be analyzed in the order given, and the results printed to standard output. There are no switches in this version. Note that running disktype on device files like your hard disk will likely require root rights. See the online documentation at <http://disktype.sourceforge.net/doc/> for some example command lines. RECOGNIZED FORMATS
The following formats are recognized by this version of disktype. File systems: FAT12/FAT16/FAT32, NTFS, HPFS, MFS, HFS, HFS Plus, ISO9660, ext2/ext3, Minix, ReiserFS, Reiser4, Linux romfs, Linux cramfs, Linux squashfs, UFS (some variations), SysV FS (some variations), JFS, XFS, Amiga FS/FFS, BeOS BFS, QNX4 FS, UDF, 3DO CD-ROM file system, Veritas VxFS, Xbox DVD file system. Partitioning: DOS/PC style, Apple, Amiga "Rigid Disk", ATARI ST (AHDI3), BSD disklabel, Linux RAID physical disks, Linux LVM1 physical volumes, Linux LVM2 physical volumes, Solaris x86 disklabel (vtoc), Solaris SPARC disklabel. Other structures: Debian split floppy header, Linux swap. Disk images: Raw CD image (.bin), Virtual PC hard disk image, Apple UDIF disk image (limited). Boot codes: LILO, GRUB, SYSLINUX, ISOLINUX, Linux kernel, FreeBSD loader, Sega Dreamcast (?). Compression formats: gzip, compress, bzip2. Archive formats: tar, cpio, bar, dump/restore. Compressed files (gzip, compress, bzip2 formats) will also have their contents analyzed using transparent decompression. The appropriate com- pression program must be installed on the system, i.e. gzip(1) for the gzip and compress formats, bzip2(1) for the bzip2 format. Disk images in general will also have their contents analyzed using the proper mapping, with the exception of the Apple UDIF format. See the online documentation at <http://disktype.sourceforge.net/doc/> for more details on the supported formats and their quirks. HOMEPAGE
http://disktype.sourceforge.net/ AUTHOR
Christoph Pfisterer <chrisp@users.sourceforge.net> SEE ALSO
file(1), gpart(8) Feb 21, 2005
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