Le jeu. 16 avr. 2020 à 21:31, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz <glaub...@physik.fu-berlin.de> a écrit : > > And if my reading of OF 'dev / ls' is correct, the disks should be: > > /ht@0,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/k2-sata@0/disk@0 > > /ht@0,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/k2-sata@1/disk@0 > What does ofpath say?
Still says: dolbeau@powermacg5:~$ sudo /usr/sbin/ofpath /dev/sda /ht@0,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/@0/@0 dolbeau@powermacg5:~$ sudo /usr/sbin/ofpath /dev/sdb /ht@0,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/@1/@0 > As far as I know, Apple's OF implementation expects "@0" instead of > "disk@0". And I have no idea where the "k2-sata@N" component comes > from. This is just the values from the OF console itself ('dev / ls'), not necessarily what is needed as a booting path. The same path is in /sys: dolbeau@powermacg5:~$ ls -l /sys/firmware/devicetree/base/ht@0\,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/k2-sata@*/*|grep disk /sys/firmware/devicetree/base/ht@0,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/k2-sata@0/disk@0: /sys/firmware/devicetree/base/ht@0,f2000000/pci@9/k2-sata-root@c/k2-sata@1/disk@0: Apparently on this machine, the 'scsi' bit (that appears in Michael's G5 output) has been replaced by a 'k2-sata' bit. It seems to be misunderstood by the script, as it's where the difference between sda and sdb should appear... Cordially, -- Romain Dolbeau