Chapter 3
Managing Disk Volumes
53
1. Determine which disk is the default boot device
From the OpenBoot
ok
prompt, type the
printenv
command, and if necessary the
devalias
command, to identify the default boot device. For example:
2. Type the
boot net –s
command
3. Once the system has booted, use the
raidctl
(
1M
) utility to create a hardware
mirrored volume, using the default boot device as the primary disk.
See
“To Create a Hardware Mirrored Volume” on page 49
. For example:
4. Install the volume with the Solaris Operating System using any supported
method.
The hardware RAID volume
c0t0d0
appears as a disk to the Solaris installation
program.
Note –
The logical device names might appear differently on your system,
depending on the number and type of add-on disk controllers installed.
▼
To Create a Hardware Striped Volume
1. Verify which hard drive corresponds with which logical device name and physical
device name.
See
“Disk Slot Numbers, Logical Device Names, and Physical Device Names” on
ok
printenv boot-device
boot-device = disk
ok
devalias disk
disk /pci@780/pci@0/pci@9/scsi@0/disk@0,0
ok
boot net –s
#
raidctl -c c0t0d0 c0t1d0
Creating RAID volume c0t0d0 will destroy all data on member disks,
proceed
(yes/no)? yes
Volume c0t0d0 created
#
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