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Disks moved and making file domains

 
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Alice Daniel
Frequent Advisor

Disks moved and making file domains

My DS20 has been hardware configured such that a custom device is on SCSI bus -> DKA (where the disks used to be) and my 2 disks are now on DKB. Originally my fstab entries were relative to rz0 and rz1 --> dka, but now, the disks have been renamed to rz8 and rz9 respectively.
Right now when I reboot, I am not able to mount the disk partitions properly, so I cant rebuild the system, because /usr is not found on the new disk name (rz8) . What needs to be done to get /usr (originally on partition rz0g) along with /swap on rz0b) mounted or accessed properly WITHOUT loosing any data on those disks?
8 REPLIES 8
Ivan Ferreira
Honored Contributor
Solution

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

If you can boot to single user mode:

>>> boot -fl s

You can change the links in the /etc/fdmns/ directory. Create a new link pointing to the right device with ln -s. Ensure that you specify the same ending letter (partition, like rzXa, rzXg, rzXh)

Example:

cd /etc/fdmns/usr_domain
ln -sf /dev/rz8h

For the swap device, you should change it on /etc/fstab.
Por que hacerlo dificil si es posible hacerlo facil? - Why do it the hard way, when you can do it the easy way?
Alice Daniel
Frequent Advisor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

I tried that, but I got:

/rz8h: Read-only file system
Alice Daniel
Frequent Advisor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

Also, this is how my /etc/fdmns directory looks:

-r--- 1 root system 0 ... .advfslock_fdmns
-r--- 1 root system 0 ... .advfslock_usr_domain


drwxr-xr-x 2 root system ... root_domain
drwxr-xr-x 2 root system ... usr_domain

I tried to change the permissions for the lock files, but got the :read-only file system msg again.

Hein van den Heuvel
Honored Contributor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains



After you booted a 4.0 system in snadalone mode you can make the root file system modifyable by executing:

mount -u

Hein.


Ivan Ferreira
Honored Contributor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

I forgot to methion that you need to run:

mount -u /

To make / rw.
Por que hacerlo dificil si es posible hacerlo facil? - Why do it the hard way, when you can do it the easy way?
Alice Daniel
Frequent Advisor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

should I get rid of the existing link of rz0h -> /dev/rz0g ?
Ivan Ferreira
Honored Contributor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

Just remove the file, and keep a record on some notepad just in case.
Por que hacerlo dificil si es posible hacerlo facil? - Why do it the hard way, when you can do it the easy way?
Alice Daniel
Frequent Advisor

Re: Disks moved and making file domains

Thanks to all that replied. I also had to reset the /sbin/swapdefault... I can now boot!