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还是建议你使用网络服务来达到该目的。
1、拷贝磁带机内容到主机上
2、ftp拷贝的内容到PC的FTP Server上
关于把移动硬盘直接挂在主机上我没有试过,其描述如下:
Using USB Mass Storage Devices
Starting in the Solaris 9 release, the following USB removable mass storage devices are
supported:
CD-RWs
Hards disks
DVDs
Digital cameras
Diskette devices
Zip, Peerless, SmartMedia, CompactFlash, and ORB devices
For a complete list of USB devices that are supported in the Solaris OS, see:
http://www.sun.com/io_technologies/USB.html
All USB storage devices are accessed as removable media devices, which provides the
following advantages:
USB storage devices with standard MS-DOS or Windows (FAT) file systems are
supported.
You can use the user-friendly rmformat command instead of the format
command to format and partition all USB storage devices. If the functionality of
the format command is needed, use the format -e command.
You can use the fdisk command if you need to do fdisk-style partitioning.
Non-root users can now access USB storage devices, since the root-privileged
mount command is no longer needed. The device is automatically mounted by
vold and is available under the /rmdisk directory. If a new device is connected
while the system is down, do a reconfiguration boot with the boot -r command
so that vold recognizes the device. Note that vold does not automatically
recognize a hot-plugged device. If a new device is connected while the system is
up, restart vold. For more information, refer to the vold(1M) and
scsa2usb(7D) man pages.
These devices can be managed with or without volume management.
Disks with FAT file systems can be mounted and accessed. For example:
mount -F pcfs /dev/dsk/c2t0d0s0:c /mnt
All USB storage devices are now power managed, except for those that support
LOG SENSE pages. Devices with LOG SENSE pages are usually SCSI drives
connected through a USB-to-SCSI bridge device. In previous Solaris releases, some
USB storage devices were not power managed because they were not seen as
removable media.
Applications might work differently with USB mass storage devices. Keep the
following issues in mind when using applications with USB storage devices:
Applications might make incorrect assumptions about the size of the media
since only smaller devices like diskettes and Zip drives were removable
previously.
Requests by applications to eject media on devices where this would be
inapplicable, such as a hard drive, will succeed and do nothing.
If you prefer the behavior in previous Solaris releases where not all USB mass
storage were treated as removable media devices, then you can force the old
behavior by updating the /kernel/drv/scsa2usb.conf file.
128 System Administration Guide: Devices and File Systems ?January 2005
For more information on using USB mass storage devices, see scsa2usb(7D). |
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