Chapter 6 Powering On the Server 89
Booting the Solaris Operating System
The Solaris OS is preinstalled on the drive in slot 0. The Solaris OS is not configured
(that is, the sys-unconfig command was run in the factory). If you boot the server
from this disk, you will be prompted to configure the Solaris OS for your
environment.
▼ To Boot the Solaris Operating System
1. At the ok prompt, boot from the disk that contains the Solaris OS.
■ If you know which disk to boot from, go to Step 2.
■ If you need to determine which disk to boot from, issue the show-disks
command at the ok prompt to see the path to the configured disks.
2. Type the boot command at the ok prompt.
Use the value from Step 1 to construct the boot command. You need to append the
target to the disk path. In the following example, the server is being booted from
disk 0 (zero), so @0,0 is appended to the disk path.
ok show-disks
a) /pci@7c0/pci@0/pci@2/pci@0,2/LSILogic,sas@4/disk
q) NO SELECTION
Enter Selection, q to quit: q
ok
ok boot / pci@7c0/pci@0/pci@2/pci@0,2/LSILogic,sas@4/disk@0,0
Boot device: / pci@7c0/pci@0/pci@2/pci@0,2/LSILogic,sas@4/
disk@0,0
File and args:
Notice: Unimplemented procedure 'encode-unit' in
/pci@7c0/pci@0/pci@2/pci@0/LSILogic,sas@4
Loading ufs-file-system package 1.4 04 Aug 1995 13:02:54.
FCode UFS Reader 1.12 00/07/17 15:48:16.
Loading: /platform/SUNW,Ontario/ufsboot
Loading: /platform/sun4v/ufsboot
SunOS Release 5.10 Version
/net/spa/export/spa2/ws/pothier/grlks10-ontario:12/01/2004 64-bit
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Use is subject to license terms.