For Solaris (I know, big help
), I run the command
touch /reconfigure and then bring down the system. This file (and
reboot -- -r or
boot -r when starting from the OpenBootProm) tells Solaris to rebuild the device tree when the system comes back up.
I install the drive and then bring the system up. Running
format will show me all the drives the system can see. Enter the drive number (
0 to the last disk) then the commands
p and
p to display the partition table information.
Once that's there, I can assign blocks to specific slices, 0 through 7. Once assigned, I enter the command
l for
label which writes the partition table to the disk.
q to quit and
q to quit
format puts me back to the prompt.
Once the disk partition table has been written, I need to run
newfs on the newly allocated slice which puts down a default ufs type file system. I can then mount it to its new home.
Once it's mounted and I know it works, I'll edit
/etc/vfstab and add the new mount point so it's mounted upon next boot.
You might check this site:
http://bhami.com/rosetta.html
With the commands I layed out above, you might be able to figure out the correct SCO commands to use to do the same thing.
Ohhh, a quick google search finds this:
http://docsrv.sco.com:507/en/HANDBOO...ks_adding.html
This link might be perfect.
Carl