Access to /dev/hda4p1 ?
Adriel Cardenas G.
adriel at linuxtlan.com
Tue Apr 25 16:57:14 UTC 2006
on 24/04/2006 13:00 Chris Linton-Ford said the following:
> Hi there,
>
> I have a disk setup that looks like the following:
>
> [root at box ~]# fdisk -l /dev/hda
>
> Disk /dev/hda: 30.7 GB, 30750031872 bytes
> 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 3738 cylinders
> Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
>
> Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
> /dev/hda1 * 1 13 104391 83 Linux
> /dev/hda2 14 2180 17406427+ 83 Linux
> /dev/hda3 2181 2244 514080 82 Linux swap /
> Solaris
> /dev/hda4 2245 3738 12000555 83 Linux
>
> hda4 has been (sub)partitioned so that fdisk reports the following:
>
> [root at box ~]# fdisk -l /dev/hda4
>
> Disk /dev/hda4: 12.2 GB, 12288568320 bytes
> 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 1494 cylinders
> Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
>
> Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
> /dev/hda4p1 * 1 13 104391 83 Linux
> /dev/hda4p2 14 1494 11896132+ 8e Linux LVM
>
> What I would like to know is, how can I get access to (i.e. mount) these
> partitions? The /dev/hda4p{0,1} special files don't exist, and I have
> had no success creating them with mknod as I don't know what the major
> or minor device numbers should be.
>
> Any help gratefully receieved.
>
> Chris L-F
>
Why does it say Solaris in those partitions?? is it solaris installed
there???, in that case you're trying to access a Solaris slice, those
are partitions within a big Solaris partition, with the UFS. Try a
little search about "mounting ufs partition and slices".
Regards
Adriel
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