Just from my experienc with using CD-ROM under OS X:
say You want partition 1 of disk 5
You dont need the: /dev/disk5s1
But: /dev/rdisk5s1 wich is a raw access
Mike
Enric Pedascoll Quingles wrote:
well, now i have running macosX.4 and i want to start a qemu session
with a Debian partition, i know that macos partition is disk0s5 but
all other partitions are Debian (swap, root, home ...), i try to boot
all the disk /dev/disk0 and select Debian in a yaboot but when i type
qemu -hda /dev/disk0, qemu crash
On 9/28/05, Jonas Maebe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 28 sep 2005, at 16:29, Enric Pedascoll Quingles wrote:
i try to boot a fisical mac's partition with qemu but i don't obtain
good results
i have read in documentation files that the command is:
~#qemu -snapshot -hda /dev/(your disk)
i try several way with the same result
~#qemu -snapshot -hda /dev/hda
~#qemu -snapshot -hda /dev/disk0
~#qemu -snapshot -hda /dev/hda0s1..s2...s5
and nothing...
Under Mac OS X, partitions are available as /dev/diskXsY and not /dev/
hdXsY. Your boot partition /dev/disk0sY, other disks can get a
different number after every reboot.
You can find the device name of a partition (under Mac OS X 10.4.x at
least) by opening /Applications/Utilities/Disk Utility, selecting a
partition and choosing File->Get Info.
Jonas
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