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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Pointing one hard drive name to another disk Post 76113 by andy57s on Friday 24th of June 2005 01:32:58 PM
Old 06-24-2005
Disk remapping

RTM,
Thx for your reponse. The systems are running Solaris 8.0.
Both s2d9 & s2d11 are Disk Devices.

df -k info from eidsrv02:

Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
/proc 0 0 0 0% /proc
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s0 33270310 1143991 31793616 4% /
fd 0 0 0 0% /dev/fd
/dev/dsk/c0t8d0s0 35284677 24543656 10388175 71% /s2d12
/dev/dsk/c0t9d0s0 35284677 20239173 14692658 58% /s2d11
/dev/dsk/c0t10d0s0 35284677 12624638 22307193 37% /s2d10
/dev/dsk/c0t11d0s0 35284677 3432533 31499298 10% /s2d9
/dev/dsk/c0t12d0s0 35284677 31285056 3646775 90% /s2d8
eidsrv01:/s1d8/tools 35284677 28504429 6427402 82% /tools
/s2d9 35284677 3432533 31499298 10% /eidsrv02/s2d9

thx,
Andy

Last edited by andy57s; 06-24-2005 at 02:40 PM.. Reason: More info added
 

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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 3.27 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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