Kudos to all of you sun sysad guru's. Especially to Dieter Gobbers
(whose advice I took) only because he was the first responder, Jeff Wasilko,
Jim Harmon, Rudy Yu, and Stephen Harris. Their responses are listed below.
To recap my question was:
>
> I'm having a problem installing a new drive. format will not see it.
> When I start the system it also gives me the following warning:
>
> Warning: /sbus@1f,0/espdma@e,8400000/esp@e,8800000/sd@2,0 (sd2):
> corrupt label - wrong magic number
I assume you are using Solaris 2.x:
type:
drvconfig
disks
than format will see the drive. Allow format to 'label' the drive or it
won't be usable by the system.
Greetings, Dieter Gobbers
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: jeffw@smoe.org (Jeff Wasilko)
You're getting this message because the disk has no label.
Format isn't seeing it because you probably didn't do a boot -r
to reconfigure the system.
Once you do that, you can use format to partition and label the
disk.
Jeff
------------------------------------------------------------------------
>From jharmon@telecnnct.com Thu May 15 13:48:01 1997
first type
file -c
to check your /etc/magic file
Then try umounting sd2 so that you can use the format command
format
(select drive sd2)
label
(that should fix the label.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
>From ryu@anthem.com Thu May 15 13:35:21 1997
You are trying to install a "non-Sun-supported" hard drive to your system. If you
are using Solaris 2.x, you need to go to the EEPROM mode (i.e. ok mode), and
"probe-scsi" to ensure the system recognize all your SCSI devices. After that you
need to do "boot -r" to have Solaris reconfigure the system (and rebuild your
hardware device tree). When you back to the system prompt (#) and do "format", you
should be able to see your new drive. Of cause, you can change the default partition
table, just make sure you label the drive.
For SunOS 4.1.x, you need to get the hard drive entry for the "/etc/format.dat"
file.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
>From sweh@mpn.com Thu May 15 13:19:28 1997
Shutdown and halt, so you drop into PROM mode, then from there "boot -r".
This will tell Solaris to build the /dev/ and /devices/ entries and then
"format" should see the disk OK no problem.
-- Jonathan Loh System Administrator NetJet Communications, Inc. (415) 537-3800 jloh@netjet.com *** Please quote when responding! Thanks!
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