On 30/12/11 15:10, Alan Cox wrote:
Agreed. But you have to *know* the drive serial number or UUID to do
that. And there is, of course, a high probability that you will not have
that information available.
It's in procfs, sysfs, ioctls and via dmesg. It's not hard to get at !
and if you are doin
> Agreed. But you have to *know* the drive serial number or UUID to do
> that. And there is, of course, a high probability that you will not have
> that information available.
It's in procfs, sysfs, ioctls and via dmesg. It's not hard to get at !
and if you are doing it in advance you can also u
On 12/29/2011 11:30 AM, Alan Cox wrote:
which disk the initial load occurred from? I did run dmidecode and found
nothing of value.
dmidecode is the wrong interface. EDD provides the drive to BIOS mapping
tables, DMI provides static configuration data.
Your two hard drives are otherwise (I pr
On Thu, 2011-12-29 at 16:30 +, Alan Cox wrote:
> > > which disk the initial load occurred from? I did run dmidecode and found
> > > nothing of value.
>
> dmidecode is the wrong interface. EDD provides the drive to BIOS mapping
> tables, DMI provides static configuration data.
>
> > Your two
> > which disk the initial load occurred from? I did run dmidecode and found
> > nothing of value.
dmidecode is the wrong interface. EDD provides the drive to BIOS mapping
tables, DMI provides static configuration data.
> Your two hard drives are otherwise (I presume) exactly alike.
Just use th
On 12/27/2011 11:21 AM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 2:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
>> Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from (eg
>> disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to view the
>> BIOS settings?
> If both disks h
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 12:12 AM, wrote:
>[...]
> In this case it turns out it was booting off of sda (which is what I
> suspected), I ended up taking a ride down to the datacenter and verifying
> the BIOS.
>
> The original question although no longer important remains, can you tell
> which disk
On 2011/12/27 07:12, j...@bubble.org wrote:
On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 2:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from (eg
disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to view the
BIOS settings?
The situation is this, I have a mach
> On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 2:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
>> Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from (eg
>> disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to view the
>> BIOS settings?
>>
>> The situation is this, I have a machine at a remote location where
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Boot disk?
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Date:
Sun, 25 Dec 2011 1:37 PM (4 hours 28 minutes ago)
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Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using t
On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 2:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
> Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from (eg
> disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to view the
> BIOS settings?
>
> The situation is this, I have a machine at a remote location where the
> s
On Sun, 2011-12-25 at 16:37 -0500, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
> Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from (eg
> disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to view the
> BIOS settings?
>
> The situation is this, I have a machine at a remote location where the
On 12/26/2011 12:23 AM, Aaron Konstam wrote:
On Sun, 2011-12-25 at 23:53 +0200, Rares Aioanei wrote:
On 12/25/2011 11:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from
(eg disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to
view the BIOS
On Sun, 2011-12-25 at 23:53 +0200, Rares Aioanei wrote:
> On 12/25/2011 11:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
> > Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from
> > (eg disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to
> > view the BIOS settings?
> >
> > The situation
On 12/25/2011 11:37 PM, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
Is there a way to identify which disk the BIOS is using to boot from
(eg disk 0 or 1) when I don't have physical access to the system to
view the BIOS settings?
The situation is this, I have a machine at a remote location where the
system runs RAID-
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