Tim:

OK

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo fdisk c0d0s0 -R (readonly)

            Total disk size is 9964 cylinders
             Cylinder size is 16065 (512 byte) blocks

                                               Cylinders
      Partition   Status    Type          Start   End   Length    %
      =========   ======    ============  =====   ===   ======   ===
          1       Active    Other OS       2433  7531    5099     51
          2                 Linux native   7532  9841    2310     23
          3                 Solaris2          1  2392    2392     24

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ mount | grep -w ^/
/ on /dev/dsk/c0d0s0
read/write/setuid/devices/intr/largefiles/logging/xattr/onerror=panic/dev=1980000
on Sun Dec  2 23:33:42 2007

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ df
/                  (/dev/dsk/c0d0s0   ):12224460 blocks   909387 files
/devices           (/devices          ):       0 blocks        0 files
/dev               (/dev              ):       0 blocks        0 files
/system/contract   (ctfs              ):       0 blocks 2147483615 files
/proc              (proc              ):       0 blocks     7981 files
/etc/mnttab        (mnttab            ):       0 blocks        0 files
/etc/svc/volatile  (swap              ): 2411824 blocks   150303 files
/system/object     (objfs             ):       0 blocks 2147483496 files
/lib/libc.so.1     (/usr/lib/libc/libc_hwcap1.so.1):12224460 blocks
909387 files
/dev/fd            (fd                ):       0 blocks        0 files
/tmp               (swap              ): 2411824 blocks   150303 files
/var/run           (swap              ): 2411824 blocks   150303 files
/export/home       (home              ):19608759 blocks 19608759 files

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ zpool status
  pool: home
 state: ONLINE
 scrub: none requested
config:

        NAME        STATE     READ WRITE CKSUM
        home        ONLINE       0     0     0
          c0d0s1    ONLINE       0     0     0

errors: No known data errors
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$


Would I be right in thinking here, that my fat32 partition; the 40 GB
one (50%) seems not to be being recognized?

It would not be suprising knowing that partition and it's record, it
would also make sese with whats up there^^ and what I have been seeing
- "no tdos partition" etc.

Thanks for replying Tim, I really appreciate it. It may not have
solved the problem, but at least I am fairly certain what the problem
is and what I can do about it.

Again, many thanks,

Tim


On 02/12/2007, Tim Spriggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello Tim,
>

>
> This will give you the list of partitions and hopefully tell you which
> partition is FAT32.
>
> You can figure out which disk it is since it is the same disk used by
> Nexenta. If you are using UFS root then simply:
>
> # mount | grep -w ^/
>
> For ZFS root do:
>
> # zpool status
>
> Don't forget to replace "s?" (probably s0) with p0 for fdisk.
>
> Good luck,
> -Tim
>
> Tim Dobson wrote:
> > Hi perhaps you can help me.
> > I would be very grateful if someone could!
> >
> > I have a fat32 partition which i keep various day-to-day bits and
> > bobs, dating back from the old days.
> > I want to mount it. It does not sound very difficult;
> > I have IDE HDs
> > My Nexenta & the Fat32 partition are on the same drive, which happens
> > to be the master.
> >
> > I have been trying to follow various sets of instructions, which  are
> > readily availabe on the web via google.
> >
> > for the purposes here, I will try demonstrate with the instructions
> > from here: 
> > http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jspa?threadID=5113158&messageID=9385288
> >
> > The problem I get unstuck at is that I don't know what the /dev/dsk/
> > id of my partition is.
> > I also don't understand what the "Y" does in cXdXpX:Y
> >
> > #####
> >
> > I wonder if there is a command which will list the partitions on ones
> > disk with the file systems and /dev/dsk/ ids.
> >
> > #####
> >
> > I have asked on irc but there was no immediate response.
> >
> > I would be very grateful of a response.
> >
> > Cheers
> >
> > Tim
> >
> >
>
>


-- 
www.dobo.urandom.co.uk
----
If each of us have one object, and we exchange them, then each of us
still has one object.
If each of us have one idea, and we exchange them, then each of us now
has two ideas.   -  George Bernard Shaw
_______________________________________________
gnusol-users mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.sonic.net/mailman/listinfo/gnusol-users

Reply via email to