It is the vmware lsi scsi controller...

I managed to fix the UFS disk (DISK A) using the procedure describe  
here (https://www.opensolaris.org/jive/thread.jspa?threadID=7615) but  
I am still struggling with the ZFS boot disk (DISK B).

On 08/10/2007, at 7:53 AM, Eric Schrock wrote:

> What driver are you using?  The SATA framework has a bug that prevents
> ldi_open_by_devid() from working early in boot.  ZFS is trying to  
> do the
> right thing, but has to fall back on the physical device path,  
> which in
> this case is the wrong value.
>
> - Eric
>
> On Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 07:26:39AM +0700, 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
>
> --
> Eric Schrock, Solaris Kernel Development       http://blogs.sun.com/ 
> eschrock

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