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1. Managing Removable Media (Overview) 2. Managing Removable Media (Tasks) 3. Accessing Removable Media (Tasks) 4. Writing CDs and DVDs (Tasks) 5. Managing Devices (Overview/Tasks) 6. Dynamically Configuring Devices (Tasks) 7. Using USB Devices (Overview) 9. Using InfiniBand Devices (Overview/Tasks) 11. Administering Disks (Tasks) Administering Disks (Task Map) How to Identify the Disks on a System How to Determine if a Disk Is Formatted How to Display Disk Slice Information Recovering a Corrupted Disk Label How to Recover a Corrupted Disk Label How to Create a format.dat Entry Automatically Configuring SCSI Disk Drives How to Automatically Configure a SCSI Drive How to Identify a Defective Sector by Using Surface Analysis How to Repair a Defective Sector Tips and Tricks for Managing Disks 12. SPARC: Adding a Disk (Tasks) 13. x86: Adding a Disk (Tasks) 14. Configuring Solaris iSCSI Targets and Initiators (Tasks) 15. Configuring and Managing the Solaris Internet Storage Name Service (iSNS) 16. The format Utility (Reference) 17. Managing File Systems (Overview) 18. Creating UFS, TMPFS, and LOFS File Systems (Tasks) 19. Mounting and Unmounting File Systems (Tasks) 20. Using The CacheFS File System (Tasks) 21. Configuring Additional Swap Space (Tasks) 22. Checking UFS File System Consistency (Tasks) 23. UFS File System (Reference) 24. Backing Up and Restoring File Systems (Overview) 25. Backing Up Files and File Systems (Tasks) 26. Using UFS Snapshots (Tasks) 27. Restoring Files and File Systems (Tasks) 28. UFS Backup and Restore Commands (Reference) 29. Copying UFS Files and File Systems (Tasks) |
Creating and Examining a Disk LabelThe labeling of a disk is usually done during system installation or when you are creating new disk slices. You might need to relabel a disk if the disk label becomes corrupted. For example, from a power failure. The format utility attempts to automatically configure any unlabeled SCSI disk. If the format utility is able to automatically configure an unlabeled disk, it displays a message similar to the following: c0t0d1: configured with capacity of 4.00GB Tip - For information on labeling multiple disks with the same disk label, see Labeling Multiple Disks by Using the prtvtoc and fmthard Commands. How to Label a DiskYou can use the following procedure to do the following:
If you want to put an EFI label on disk smaller than 1 terabyte, see Example 11-6.
The following example shows how to automatically configure and label a 1.05-Gbyte disk. # format c1t0d0: configured with capacity of 1002.09MB AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS: 0. c0t3d0 <SUN1.05 cyl 2036 alt 2 hd 14 sec 72> /iommu@f,e0000000/sbus@f,e0001000/espdma@f,400000/esp@f,800000/sd@1,0 1. c1t0d0 <SUN1.05 cyl 2036 alt 2 hd 14 sec 72> /iommu@f,e0000000/sbus@f,e0001000/espdma@f,400000/esp@f,800000/sd@1,0 Specify disk (enter its number): 1 Disk not labeled. Label it now? yes format> verify format> q #Example 11-6 Labeling a Disk Less Than 1 Terabyte with an EFI Label The following example shows how to use the format -e command to label a disk that is less than 1 terabyte with an EFI label. Remember to verify that your layered software products will continue to work on systems with EFI-labeled disks. For general information on EFI label restrictions, see Restrictions of the EFI Disk Label. # format -e Searching for disks...done AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS: 1. c1t0d0 <SUNW18g cyl 7506 alt 2 hd 19 sec 248> /sbus@2,0/QLGC,isp@2,10000/sd@0,0 2. c1t1d0 <SUNW18g cyl 7506 alt 2 hd 19 sec 248> /sbus@2,0/QLGC,isp@2,10000/sd@1,0 3. c1t8d0 <SUNW18g cyl 7506 alt 2 hd 19 sec 248> /sbus@2,0/QLGC,isp@2,10000/sd@8,0 4. c1t9d0 <SUNW18g cyl 7506 alt 2 hd 19 sec 248> /sbus@2,0/QLGC,isp@2,10000/sd@9,0 Specify disk (enter its number): 4 selecting c1t9d0 [disk formatted] format> label [0] SMI Label [1] EFI Label Specify Label type[0]: 1 Ready to label disk, continue? yes format> quit How to Examine a Disk LabelExamine disk label information by using the prtvtoc command. For a detailed description of the disk label and the information that is displayed by the prtvtoc command, see Chapter 10, Managing Disks (Overview).
The following example shows disk label information for a disk with a VTOC label. # prtvtoc /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s0 * /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s0 partition map * * Dimensions: * 512 bytes/sector * 63 sectors/track * 15 tracks/cylinder * 945 sectors/cylinder * 8894 cylinders * 8892 accessible cylinders * * Flags: * 1: unmountable * 10: read-only * * First Sector Last * Partition Tag Flags Sector Count Sector Mount Directory 0 2 00 1048950 3381210 4430159 / 1 3 01 0 1048950 1048949 2 5 00 0 8402940 8402939 7 8 00 4430160 3972780 8402939 /export/home The following example shows disk label information for a disk with an EFI label. # prtvtoc /dev/rdsk/c3t1d0s0 * /dev/rdsk/c3t1d0s0 partition map * * Dimensions: * 512 bytes/sector * 2479267840 sectors * 2479267773 accessible sectors * * Flags: * 1: unmountable * 10: read-only * * First Sector Last * Partition Tag Flags Sector Count Sector Mount Directory 0 2 00 34 262144 262177 1 3 01 262178 262144 524321 6 4 00 524322 2478727100 2479251421 8 11 00 2479251422 16384 2479267805 |
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