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Date:      Tue, 30 Jun 1998 10:16:25 +0930
From:      Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
To:        Ian Kallen <ian@gamespot.com>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: ccd configuration
Message-ID:  <19980630101625.Y1880@freebie.lemis.com>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.3.95q.980629170014.985G-100000@mail.gamespot.com>; from Ian Kallen on Mon, Jun 29, 1998 at 05:14:57PM -0700
References:  <Pine.BSF.3.95q.980629170014.985G-100000@mail.gamespot.com>

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On Monday, 29 June 1998 at 17:14:57 -0700, Ian Kallen wrote:
>
> So I've got these two identical SCSI disks, I newfs'd them and, with the
> requisite driver in the kernel, then put them together by saying
> cd /dev ; sh MAKEDEV ccd0
> ccdconfig ccd0 32 0 /dev/sd1s1e /dev/sd2s1e
> newfs -b 8192 -f 1024 /dev/ccd0c
> mount /dev/ccd0c /mnt
>
> Great.  That works.  I'm just curious why I needed to newfs the disks
> individually prior to ccd'ing them?  Or did I?

No.

> Is there any documentation beyond the man pages on the ins & outs of
> ccd?

Not that I know of.  It's pretty bare-bones.

> I guess I'm not clear on the boot time mounting... what do I put in
> my fstab?
>
> /dev/ccd0c /mnt ufs rw 2 2

I'd choose a better mount point if I were you.  /mnt is really
intended for temporary mounts.

> and then at mount time, /etc/ccd.conf will be referred to to figure out
> wtf ccd0c is?

Right.  If you look at /etc/rc, you'll see that just about the first
thing that the system does is to start ccd, even before mounting.

Greg
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