Thanks to all who replied (too many to name)! I am still not sure why I recieved this error but I did find a way to get through it. I ran the 'newfs' command which cleared the problem. LUCKILY I had just rebuilt the system and the partition that I was having problems with was the 'home' partition so there was currently no data on it. Now everything is working fine and I haven't recieved another problem with it yet. THANKS AGAIN! This mailing list is a life-saver! Chad Truhn #######ORIGINAL MESSAGE######## Guru's, I've got 2 different issues on 2 different systems.... I am using a Solaris V440 server running Solaris 9. I am attempting to create a mirror from one hard drive to another. I have done this before on another system without errors, but on the current system I am having problems with one paticular metadevice (corresponds directly with one slice). I have created the state database replicas and the metadevices on both disks. I attached the first slice (D10) to the RAID1 volume (D0) and the second slice (D17) to the RAID1 volume (D7). I then performed the metaroot command to change the /etc/system file and the /etc/vfstab file to boot off of the RAID1 volume. I changed the second entry in the /etc/vfstab to reflect the D7 mirror for the home partition. When booting up (before syncing with the other disk) I get the error: /dev/md/rdsk/d7: BAD SUPERBLOCK: MAGIC NUMBER WRONG /dev/md/rdsk/d7: USE AN ALTERNATE SUPER-BLOCK TO SUPPLY THE NEEDED INFORMATION /dev/md/rdsk/d7: eg. fsck [-f ufs] -o b=# [special ...] /dev/md/rdsk/d7: where # is the alternate super block. SEE fsck_ufs (1M). I then performed the 'newfs -Nv /dev/md/rdsk/d7' command to list the alternate superblocks. I attempted to run 'fsck -y -F ufs -o b=92592 /dev/md/rdsk/d7' to try to fix the superblock but to no avail. It comes back with the same 'bad superblock' error. I then tried 10 +/- of the other listed superblocks but everytime it comes back with the 'bad superblock' error. Is there something I missed or I am doing wrong? I have fixed bad superblocks before using this technique and never had a problem again. Is there another way to fix this? I am not sure what to do... The second issue is almost identical to the first, but on bootup I get the error: ### Can't roll the log for /dev/md/rdsk/d7 ### /dev/md/rdsk/d7: BAD SUPERBLOCK: MAGIC NUMBER WRONG /dev/md/rdsk/d7: USE AN ALTERNATE SUPER-BLOCK TO SUPPLY THE NEEDED INFORMATION /dev/md/rdsk/d7: eg. fsck [-f ufs] -o b=# [special ...] /dev/md/rdsk/d7: where # is the alternate super block. SEE fsck_ufs (1M). When I try to run fsck with an alternate superblock I get the error: ### Can't roll the log for /dev/md/rdsk/d7 ### I have never seen that before. I don't know what would cause it. I did some searching on the SUN website and it had one section talking about the error but it said that it could have a stale system mount. It said to do a 'df -k' to show the mounted partitions and unmount the one that I am getting the error on. I attempted this but the results of 'df -k' do not show the d7 partition being mounted. I performed a reboot (hoping it would clear it up, for whatever reason) but to no avail. PLEASE HELP!!! Thanks, Chad M Truhn Jr. Computer Analyst Chugach McKinley, Inc. N83 - Computer Systems Group (540) 653-2772 Truhncm@nswc.navy.mil _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Mon Aug 9 12:28:53 2004
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