Did some googling, I guess the culprit is the bootpath in /boot/ solaris/bootenv.rc
setprop bootpath '/[EMAIL PROTECTED],0/pci1000,[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL PROTECTED],0:a' I have to touch /reconfigure and reboot. I hope it works. On 08/10/2007, at 7:26 AM, Kugutsumen wrote: > Hi, > > Given two disk c1t0d0 (DISK A) and c1t1d0 (DISK B)... > > 1/ Standard install on DISK A. > 2/ zfs boot install on DISK B. > 3/ I change the boot order and my zfs boot works fine. > > 4/ I install grub on the mbr of DISK B > 5/ I disconnect and replace DISK A with DISK B > > 6/ Reboot, get the grub menu select Solaris ZFS and it panics that > it cannot mount root path @ device XXX... > > This is not a ZFS specific issue since even the UFS install will > fail to boot if I don't put back the disks in the exact order they > were in during the initial install. > > What am I missing? > > > _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss