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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 Determine if a Disk Is Formatted How to Display Disk Slice Information Creating and Examining a Disk Label 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) |
Identifying Disks on a SystemUse the format utility to discover the types of disks that are connected to a system. You can also use the format utility to verify that a disk is known to the system. For detailed information on using the format utility, see Chapter 16, The format Utility (Reference). How to Identify the Disks on a System
The following example shows format command output is from a system with one disk. # format AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS: 0. c0t1d0 <FUJITSU MAN3367M SUN36G 1804 43d671f> /pci@1f,0/pci@1,1/scsi@2/sd@1,0 The output associates a disk's physical and logical device name to the disk's marketing name, which appears in angle brackets <>. See the example below. This method is an easy way to identify which logical device names represent the disks that are connected to your system. For a description of logical and physical device names, see Device Naming Conventions. The following example uses a wildcard to display the four disks that are connected to a second controller. # format /dev/rdsk/c2* AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS: 0. /dev/rdsk/c2t10d0s0 <SUN9.0G cyl 4924 alt 2 hd 27 sec 133> /sbus@3,0/SUNW,fas@3,8800000/sd@a,0 1. /dev/rdsk/c2t11d0s0 <SUN9.0G cyl 4924 alt 2 hd 27 sec 133> /sbus@3,0/SUNW,fas@3,8800000/sd@b,0 2. /dev/rdsk/c2t14d0s0 <SUN18G cyl 7506 alt 2 hd 19 sec 248> /sbus@3,0/SUNW,fas@3,8800000/sd@e,0 3. /dev/rdsk/c2t15d0s0 <SUN18G cyl 7506 alt 2 hd 19 sec 248> /sbus@3,0/SUNW,fas@3,8800000/sd@f,0 Specify disk (enter its number): The following example shows how to identify the disks on a SPARC based system. # format 0. c0t1d0 <FUJITSU MAN3367M SUN36G 1804 43d671f> /pci@1f,0/pci@1,1/scsi@2/sd@1,0 Specify disk (enter its number): The output identifies that disk 0 (target 1) is connected to the second SCSI host adapter (scsi@2), which is connected to the second PCI interface (/pci@1f0/pci@1,1...). The output also associates both the physical and logical device name to the disk's marketing name, SUN36G. The following example shows how to identify the disks on an x86 based system. # format AVAILABLE DISK SELECTIONS: 0. c0d0 <DEFAULT cyl 615 alt 2 hd 64 sec 63> /pci@0,0/pci-ide@7,1/ata@0/cmdk@0,0 1. c0d1 <DEFAULT cyl 522 alt 2 hd 32 sec 63> /pci@0,0/pci-ide@7,1/ata@0/cmdk@1,0 2. c1d0 <DEFAULT cyl 817 alt 2 hd 256 sec 63> /pci@0,0/pci-ide@7,1/ata@1/cmdk@0,0 Specify disk (enter its number): The output shows that disk 0 is connected to the first PCI host adapter (pci-ide@7...), which is connected to the ATA interface (ata...). The format output on an x86 based system does not identify disks by their marketing names.
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