I tried dkctl. But it said "/dev/rwd0: addwedge: Device busy" every time.
However, I noticed that when I booted from the installation drive, the Linux partitions appeared. Maybe dk wedges only works with drives that weren't the root drive. But that doesn't sound right since I was able to get the partitions detected as dk* the first time I rebuilt the kernel.

On 9/29/22 1:16 AM, Martin Husemann wrote:

You can hardwire / to dk2 (or whichever it is), but actually simpler is
to not use a kernel with DKWEDGE_METHOD_MBR and instead do the setup
at runtime from userland: find the start sector and size of the partition
you want from fdisk output and use "dkctl addwedge ..." to configure it
as dkN, then mount that dkN.

Martin

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