format Menu and Command Descriptions
The format menu contents are displayed as follows:
FORMAT MENU:
disk - select a disk
type - select (define) a disk type
partition - select (define) a partition table
current - describe the current disk
format - format and analyze the disk
fdisk - run the fdisk program (x86 only)
repair - repair a defective sector
label - write label to the disk
analyze - surface analysis
defect - defect list management
backup - search for backup labels
verify - read and display labels
save - save new disk/partition definitions
inquiry - show vendor, product and revision
volname - set 8-character volume name
!<cmd> - execute <cmd>, then return
quit
format>
The following table describes the main menu items for the format utility.
Table 13-1 The Main Menu Item Descriptions for the format Utility
|
|
|
disk |
Command |
Lists all of the system's drives. Also lets you choose the
disk you want to use in subsequent operations. This disk is referred to
as the current disk. |
type |
Command |
Identifies the manufacturer and model of the current disk. Also
displays a list of known drive types. Choose the Auto configure option for all SCSI-2
disk drives. |
partition |
Menu |
Creates and modifies slices. For more information, see partition Menu. |
current |
Command |
Displays the following
information about the current disk:
Device name and device type
Number of cylinders, alternate cylinders, heads and sectors
Physical device name
|
format |
Command |
Formats the current disk by using one of
these sources of information in this order:
Information that is found in the format.dat file
Information from the automatic configuration process
Information that you type at the prompt if no format.dat entry exists
This command does not apply to IDE
disks. IDE disks are preformatted by the manufacturer. |
fdisk |
Menu |
x86 platform only: Runs the fdisk
program to create a Solaris fdisk partition. The fdisk command cannot be used on
disks with an EFI label that are greater than 1 terabyte in size. |
repair |
Command |
Repairs
a specific block on the current disk. |
label |
Command |
Writes a new label to the
current disk. |
analyze |
Menu |
Runs read, write, and compare tests. For more information, see analyze Menu. |
defect |
Menu |
Retrieves
and displays defect lists. For more information, see defect Menu. This feature does
not apply to IDE disks. IDE disks manage defects automatically. |
backup |
Command |
VTOC – Searches for
backup labels. EFI – Not supported. |
verify |
Command |
Displays the following information about the current disk:
Device name and device type
Number of cylinders, alternate cylinders, heads and sectors
Partition table
|
save |
Command |
VTOC –
Saves new disk and partition information. EFI – Not applicable. |
inquiry |
Command |
SCSI disks only – Displays the vendor, product
name, and revision level of the current drive. |
volname |
Command |
Labels the disk with a
new eight-character volume name that you specify. |
quit |
Command |
Exits the format menu. |
|
partition Menu
The partition menu contents are displayed as follows:
format> partition
PARTITION MENU:
0 - change `0' partition
1 - change `1' partition
2 - change `2' partition
3 - change `3' partition
4 - change `4' partition
5 - change `5' partition
6 - change `6' partition
7 - change `7' partition
select - select a predefined table
modify - modify a predefined partition table
name - name the current table
print - display the current table
label - write partition map and label to the disk
quit
partition>
The following table describes the partition menu items.
Table 13-2 Descriptions for partition Menu Items
|
|
change `n' partition |
Enables you to specify the following
information for the new partition:
Identification tag
Permission flags
Starting cylinder
Size
|
select |
Enables you to choose a predefined partition table. |
modify |
Enables
you to change all the slices in the partition table. This command is
preferred over the individual change `x' partition commands. |
name |
Enables you to specify a
name for the current partition table. |
print |
Displays the current partition table. |
label |
Writes the partition
map and the label to the current disk. |
quit |
Exits the partition menu. |
|
x86: fdisk Menu
The fdisk menu is available on x86 based systems only and appears similar
to the following.
format> fdisk
Total disk size is 8924 cylinders
Cylinder size is 16065 (512 byte) blocks
Cylinders
Partition Status Type Start End Length %
========= ====== ============ ===== === ====== ===
1 EFI 0 8924 8925 100
SELECT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING:
1. Create a partition
2. Specify the active partition
3. Delete a partition
4. Change between Solaris and Solaris2 Partition IDs
5. Edit/View extended partitions
6. Exit (update disk configuration and exit)
7. Cancel (exit without updating disk configuration)
Enter Selection:
The following table describes the fdisk menu items.
Table 13-3 x86: Descriptions for fdisk Menu Items
|
|
Create a partition |
Creates an fdisk partition.
You must create a separate partition for each OS such as Oracle Solaris
or DOS. There is a maximum of four partitions per disk. You are
prompted for the size of the fdisk partition as a percentage of the
disk. |
Specify the active partition |
Enables you to specify the partition to be used for booting. This
menu item identifies where the first stage boot program looks for the second
stage boot program. |
Delete a partition |
Deletes a previously created partition. This command destroys all the data in
the partition. |
Change between Solaris and Solaris2 Partition IDs |
Changes partition IDs from 130 (0x82) to 191 (0xbf) and back
again. |
Edit/View extended partitions |
Manages partition information that is generally used for booting. |
Exit (update disk configuration and exit) |
Writes a new version
of the partition table and exits the fdisk menu. |
Cancel (exit without updating disk configuration) |
Exits the fdisk menu
without modifying the partition table. |
|
analyze Menu
The analyze menu contents are displayed as follows:
format> analyze
ANALYZE MENU:
read - read only test (doesn't harm SunOS)
refresh - read then write (doesn't harm data)
test - pattern testing (doesn't harm data)
write - write then read (corrupts data)
compare - write, read, compare (corrupts data)
purge - write, read, write (corrupts data)
verify - write entire disk, then verify (corrupts data)
print - display data buffer
setup - set analysis parameters
config - show analysis parameters
quit
analyze>
The following table describes the analyze menu items.
Table 13-4 Descriptions for analyze Menu Items
|
|
read |
Reads each sector on the
current disk. Repairs defective blocks as a default. |
refresh |
Reads then writes data on the
current disk without harming the data. Repairs defective blocks as a default. |
test |
Writes a
set of patterns to the disk without harming the data. Repairs defective blocks
as a default. |
write |
Writes a set of patterns to the disk then reads
back the data on the disk. Destroys existing data on the disk. Repairs
defective blocks as a default. |
compare |
Writes a set of patterns to the disk,
reads back the data, and then compares it to the data in the
write buffer. Destroys existing data on the disk. Repairs defective blocks as a
default. |
purge |
Removes all data from the disk so that the data cannot
be retrieved by any means. Data is removed by writing three distinct patterns
over the entire disk (or a section of the disk). If the
verification passes, a hex-bit pattern is written over the entire disk (or a
section of the disk). Repairs defective blocks as a default. |
verify |
In the first pass,
writes unique data to each block on the entire disk. In the
next pass, reads and verifies the data. Destroys existing data on the disk.
Repairs defective blocks as a default. |
print |
Displays the data in the read/write buffer. |
setup |
Enables
you to specify the following analysis parameters: Analyze entire disk? yes
Starting block number: depends on drive
Ending block number: depends on drive
Loop continuously? no
Number of passes: 2
Repair defective blocks? yes
Stop after first error? no
Use random bit patterns? no
Number of blocks per transfer: 126 (0/n/nn)
Verify media after formatting? yes
Enable extended messages? no
Restore defect list? yes
Restore disk label? yes |
config |
Displays the current analysis parameters. |
quit |
Exits the
analyze menu. |
|
defect Menu
The defect menu contents are displayed as follows:
format> defect
DEFECT MENU:
primary - extract manufacturer's defect list
grown - extract manufacturer's and repaired defects lists
both - extract both primary and grown defects lists
print - display working list
dump - dump working list to file
quit
defect>
The following table describes the defect menu items.
Table 13-5 The defect Menu Item Descriptions
|
|
primary |
Reads the manufacturer's defect list
from the disk drive and updates the in-memory defect list. |
grown |
Reads the grown defect
list and then updates the in-memory defect list. Grown defects are defects that
have been detected during analysis. |
both |
Reads both the manufacturer's defect list and the
grown defect list. Then, updates the in-memory defect list. |
print |
Displays the in-memory defect list. |
dump |
Saves
the in-memory defect list to a file. |
quit |
Exits the defect menu. |
|