Thanks John, I have tried as you suggested using a Live CD and yes the partitions uuid's are present in gptid .. I found the UUID's in /dev/gptid - how do I determine which uid corresponds to which partition (ufs or swap or boot) (I used glabel status and after some trial and error I found them) edited the fstab accordingly and everything is working now .. Is there a way to have both the /dev/XXXpYY and /dev/gptid/<uuid> present in /dev/
Thanks again for your support. On Sat, Aug 24, 2013 at 12:14 AM, John Baldwin <j...@freebsd.org> wrote: > On Wednesday, August 21, 2013 4:38:00 pm varanasi sainath wrote: > > Thanks for the support. > > > > I want to use the uuid's found using sysctl -a in fstab. > > /dev/gptid/ has only uuid for boot partition. > > You probably have the other GPT paritions already mounted via > another name which removes the names in /dev/gptid. Try > booting an install CD or USB stick such that you use an > alternate root fs and don't mount any of the partitions on > your drive. Then you should be able to see the entries in > /dev/gptid and update your fstab appropriately. If you > console access you could also try to update your fstab to > use /dev/gptid/<uid> directly instead of /dev/XXXpYY and > reboot. If it works I believe the /dev/XXXpYY names will > now be gone from /dev and the /dev/gptid names present > instead. > > -- > John Baldwin > -- Sainath Varanasi Hyderabad 09000855250 *My Website : http://s21embedded.webs.com **Linked In Profile : http://in.linkedin.com/pub/sainathvaranasi .. .. * _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"