If you have build your kernel with Sun disk label support and UFS support as mentioned in section building your new kernel, you are now able to mount your Solaris partitions. During boot up, you should get something similar to:
hda: [PTBL] [523/255/63] hda1 hda2 < hda5 hda6 hda7 hda8 > hda3 <Polaris: [s0] hda9 [s1] hda10 [s2] hda11 [s3] hda12 [s6] hda13 [s7] hda14 >Meaning (in this case): partition 3 (
hda3
) is a
Solaris partition with 6 slices (s0,s1,s2,s3,s6,s7). They
are mapped to Linux devices hda9
to hda14
.
Try mounting your Solaris
partitions. When mounting UFS partitions, you always have to
add an -oufstype=
argument, in this case
-oufstype=sunx86
. So the command to mount a
partition is something like:
mount -oufstype=sunx86 /dev/hda14 /mntNow, test your partition. Please note: The write support on UFS partitions is very experimental. Please don't trust any data you write on your UFS partitions!
If you want your Solaris partitions automatically mounted at boot time, you can add a line like
/dev/hda14 /solaris ufs ufstype=sunx86 0 0to your /etc/fstab
And, of course there are always other ways of sharing data:
I don't know which floppy disk file systems are supported by Solaris. Do you? Mail me.
Solaris knows NFS. Linux knows NFS. This might actually be the best way of sharing data