Article Title: how to mount UFS partitions in Linux. Linux is a technology channel of the IT lab in China. Includes basic categories such as desktop applications, Linux system management, kernel research, embedded systems, and open source.
How to correctly use VM shared folders in Linux
[Mybox ~] $ Sudo fdisk-l | grep-I solaris | grep-v swap
/Dev/sdb3*1341 2557 9775552 + bf Solaris
[Mybox ~] $ Dmesg | grep solaris
Sdb3: |
From the above output, we can see that the sdb [8-12] In the solaris partition is in the Linux partition sdb3. Slice 0 (s0) is sdb8, and slice 1 (s1) is sdb9.
Therefore, if you want to attach a solaris partition, you cannot simply attach the sdb3 to it. Instead, you need to attach a separate solaris partition.
For example: sudo mount-t ufs-o ufstype = sunx86, ro/dev/sdb8/mnt/sol
If you want to write it in FSTAB, you can write it like this:
/Dev/sdb8/mnt/sol ufs ro, ufstype = sunx86, noauto 0 0
Other solaris partitions can be used.