wd2a: id not found writing fsbn 488397104 (wd2 bn 8796581419375;
cn 547561868 tn 158 sn 1), retrying
It may be trivial but I wonder where in the line you highlighted is the
clue that gave you the answer.
During the 4.1->4.2 development cycle, the disklabel layout has been
modified to allow s
Miod Vallat wrote, On 23/08/07 15:50:
# fdisk -i wd2
# disklabel -E wd2 (created 'a' partition)
# newfs wd2a
[...]
wd2a: id not found writing fsbn 488397104 (wd2 bn 8796581419375; cn
547561868 tn 158 sn 1), retrying
It looks like you are indeed running a -CURRENT (or fairly recent) kernel,
Ok, problem solved, it was indeed a mismatch between kernel & userland!
Tx!
Xavier
--
The first time that Microsoft makes a product that doesn't suck
will be when they start making vacuum cleaners!
On Thu, 23 Aug 2007, Miod Vallat wrote:
> > # fdisk -i wd2
> > # disklabel -E wd2 (created 'a' par
Argh! So stupid!
I just started a rebuild of userland tools... I'll keep you informed.
Tx Miod!
Xavier
--
Unix is very simple, but it takes a genius to understand the simplicity.
(Dennis Ritchie)
On Thu, 23 Aug 2007, Miod Vallat wrote:
> > # fdisk -i wd2
> > # disklabel -E wd2 (created 'a' parti
# fdisk -i wd2
# disklabel -E wd2 (created 'a' partition)
# newfs wd2a
[...]
wd2a: id not found writing fsbn 488397104 (wd2 bn 8796581419375; cn
547561868 tn 158 sn 1), retrying
It looks like you are indeed running a -CURRENT (or fairly recent) kernel,
but with an older userland.
Are you
Hi *,
I just reinstalled a box (running -CURRENT). I added a third IDE drive:
wd2 at pciide0 channel 1 drive 1:
wd2: 16-sector PIO, LBA48, 238475MB, 488397168 sectors
wd2(pciide0:1:1): using PIO mode 4, Ultra-DMA mode 5
dkcsum: wd2 matches BIOS drive 0x82
It will be fully dedicated to OpenBSD so
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