I redid the whole thing. Now it works. I thing the problem was that I used disklabel -E the first time, and that the BIOS geometry was bad
> Jon Sjvstedt wrote: >> Hello all! >> >> I have an OpenBSD-box with two 250G drives inside (and some SCSI). >> Trying >> to use one of the drives as a whole gave this from disklabel >> >> >> $ sudo disklabel -p g wd0 >> [snip] > > don't snip. > >> 16 partitions: >> # size offset fstype [fsize bsize cpg] >> c: 233.8G 0.0G unused 0 0 # Cyl >> 0-486343 >> d: 233.8G 0.0G 4.2BSD 2048 16384 16 # Cyl >> 0*-486343* >> >> but df -h says: >> >> /dev/wd0d 7.8G 7.4G 4.2M 100% >> >> and I cant create any new files on the drive. What could be the problem >> here? Any hints appreciated. >> >> dmesg attached. > > thanks for the dmesg. > > You tried darned hard to obscure this (I really don't care how many G > your disk is, I care about which sectors you are using), but it does > appear that you opted to not properly partition your disk. The fact > that you didn't show the output of fdisk causes me to believe you > knew it, though you may not have recognized the significance. ;) > > Your OpenBSD subpartition appears to start at sector zero. Bad idea. > This means, whether by design or by accident, you don't have an fdisk > partition table (aka, MBR) on the disk. Also a bad idea. > > On some platforms, i386 is one of them, you must use fdisk partitions, > and your disklabel partitions must start at a one track offset (in > your case, probably 63 sectors). > > When you don't follow the rules, ugly things happen. It isn't the > size of the disk, it's the way it's laid out that is giving you > problems. > > See faq14.html... > > Nick. > > > > . > <--------------------------------------------> Jon Sjvstedt _O_ Godvddersgatan 52 /(|)\ 418 38 GVTEBORG | H | -OOO-[-+X+-]-OOO- Hem 075 - 242 80 04 ( ) Mobil 0735 - 029 557 _| |_ [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]