Hi, there is mirrored pool in i86 system with Solaris 10. The one disc is internal SATA via PCI link, another USB mobile disc. OS does not boot when USB is plugged on. It is necessary to take it off, then system boots, then plug it on and then work OK. What a hell is that? Regards, http://andriusblo.blogspot.com
Sorry about this. I just couldn''t resist. Andrius wrote:> Solaris 10 does not boat >But it does ship! <wink> -- Erik Trimble Java System Support Mailstop: usca22-123 Phone: x17195 Santa Clara, CA Timezone: US/Pacific (GMT-0800)
Andrius wrote:> Hi, > > there is mirrored pool in i86 system with Solaris 10. The one disc is > internal SATA via PCI link, another USB mobile disc. OS does not boot > when USB is plugged on. It is necessary to take it off, then system > boots, then plug it on and then work OK. > What a hell is that?I''ve seen this before with MS-Windows - I left my iPod connected and on reboot the system insisted on fscking the thing. Disconnecting it made the problem disappear, and subsequent bios investigations revealed that the iPod was showing up as a bootable device. You might want to look at what your bios has got setup. James C. McPherson -- Senior Kernel Software Engineer, Solaris Sun Microsystems http://blogs.sun.com/jmcp http://www.jmcp.homeunix.com/blog
Agreed -- inserting the USB drive can sometimes cause the controller targets to shift (for example, the boot device might now be c1d0 instead of c0d0) -- that will cause problems... -----Original Message----- From: zfs-discuss-bounces at opensolaris.org [mailto:zfs-discuss-bounces at opensolaris.org] On Behalf Of James C. McPherson Sent: Friday, June 27, 2008 7:23 PM To: Andrius Cc: ZFS Subject: Re: [zfs-discuss] Solaris 10 does not boat Andrius wrote:> Hi, > > there is mirrored pool in i86 system with Solaris 10. The one disc is > internal SATA via PCI link, another USB mobile disc. OS does not boot > when USB is plugged on. It is necessary to take it off, then system > boots, then plug it on and then work OK. > What a hell is that?I''ve seen this before with MS-Windows - I left my iPod connected and on reboot the system insisted on fscking the thing. Disconnecting it made the problem disappear, and subsequent bios investigations revealed that the iPod was showing up as a bootable device. You might want to look at what your bios has got setup. James C. McPherson -- Senior Kernel Software Engineer, Solaris Sun Microsystems http://blogs.sun.com/jmcp http://www.jmcp.homeunix.com/blog _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss at opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss
James C. McPherson wrote:> Andrius wrote: >> Hi, >> >> there is mirrored pool in i86 system with Solaris 10. The one disc is >> internal SATA via PCI link, another USB mobile disc. OS does not boot >> when USB is plugged on. It is necessary to take it off, then system >> boots, then plug it on and then work OK. >> What a hell is that? > > I''ve seen this before with MS-Windows - I left my iPod > connected and on reboot the system insisted on fscking > the thing. Disconnecting it made the problem disappear, > and subsequent bios investigations revealed that the > iPod was showing up as a bootable device. > > > You might want to look at what your bios has got setup. > > > > James C. McPherson > -- > Senior Kernel Software Engineer, Solaris > Sun Microsystems > http://blogs.sun.com/jmcp http://www.jmcp.homeunix.com/blogThanks. BIOS funcion "USB for DOS" were enabled. It crashed system. Regards, Andrius -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: burlega.vcf Type: text/x-vcard Size: 157 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://mail.opensolaris.org/pipermail/zfs-discuss/attachments/20080628/840e8fc0/attachment.vcf>