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Date:      Fri, 8 Feb 2013 13:53:17 GMT
From:      Anton Shterenlikht <mexas@bristol.ac.uk>
To:        bonomi@mail.r-bonomi.com, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org, freebsd-sparc64@freebsd.org, mexas@bristol.ac.uk
Subject:   Re: mount: /dev/da0p1: Invalid argument
Message-ID:  <201302081353.r18DrHRW035061@mech-cluster241.men.bris.ac.uk>
In-Reply-To: <201302081322.r18DMgVi060782@mail.r-bonomi.com>

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	From bonomi@mail.r-bonomi.com Fri Feb  8 13:27:49 2013

	> From: Anton Shterenlikht <mexas@bristol.ac.uk>
	> Subject: Re: mount: /dev/da0p1: Invalid argument
	>
	>  From kostikbel@gmail.com Fri Feb  8 12:25:21 2013
	>
	>  On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 12:01:41PM +0000, Anton Shterenlikht wrote:
	>  > I need to transfer some files from sparc64 -current
	>  > box onto amd64 9.1-RELEASE laptop.
	>  > The amd64 laptop has no network connection yet,
	>  > so I'm trying to achive this with a USB flash drive.=20
	>  >=20
	>  > The problem is that I always end up with
	>  >=20
	>  > # mount /dev/da0p1 /mnt/
	>  > mount: /dev/da0p1: Invalid argument
	>  > #=20
	>  >=20
	>  > If I do newfs on the sparc64 box, then I can't
	>  > mount it on the amd64 box, and vice versa.
	>  >=20
	>  > I tried just "newfs /dev/da0", and using gpart,
	>  > e.g.:
	>  >=20
	>  > # gpart show /dev/da0
	>  > =3D>     34  4029373  da0  GPT  (1.9G)
	>  >        34     2048    1  freebsd-ufs  (1.0M)
	>  >      2082  4027325       - free -  (1.9G)
	>  >=20
	>  > #
	>  >=20
	>  > and then "newfs /dev/da0p1", or similar,
	>  > but no luck.
	>  >=20
	>  > I tried sparc64 VTOC8 partition scheme too - no help.
	>  >=20
	>  > I can mount the device and use it as expected,
	>  > i.e. copy files to/from it on either box, but
	>  > the other box doesn't seem to understand the file
	>  > system.
	>  >=20
	>  > I tried loading various modules in desperation,
	>  > e.g. on the sparc64 side:
	>  >=20
	>  > # kldstat=20
	>  > Id Refs Address            Size     Name
	>  >  1    9 0xc0000000 a80e58   kernel
	>  >  2    1 0x101bca000 104000   geom_part_mbr.ko
	>  >  3    1 0x101cce000 110000   geom_label.ko
	>  >  4    1 0x101dde000 108000   geom_part_gpt.ko
	>  > #=20
	>  >=20
	>  > but still no use.=20
	>  >=20
	>  > Am I missing something simple?
	>
	>  UFS on FreeBSD is not endian-agnostic. It uses the host byte order
	>  for multibyte values.
	>
	>  As result, you can share UFS volumes only between hosts with the same
	>  endianess, like i386/amd64/ia64 little endian or sparc64/mips big endian.
	>  AFAIK, NetBSD has such support.
	>
	> Wow... I didn't realise that.
	> I thought UFS (1 or 2) takes all care
	> of endian-ness. Do you mean that even
	> I had say a SCSI internal disk with UFS2,
	> I couldn't move it between a little and
	> a big endian freebsd boxes?
	>
	> So what is the advice for transferring data
	> via USB in such cases? Any other gpart partition
	> I could use?

	you could use zfs.

	easier is to use the media as src/dest for tar/gtar/bsdtar/etc.
	tar is endian-agnostic, although there may be endian-ness issues
	with binary data in files inside the tarball.

Yes, tar works, e.g. on sparc64 side:

# tar -cf - /home/mexas/ftree.gv | dd of=/dev/da0
tar: Removing leading '/' from member names
20+0 records in
20+0 records out
10240 bytes transferred in 0.214031 secs (47844 bytes/sec)
# 

Then on amd64 side:

#dd if=/dev/da0 | tar -xf -

I've got my file. The only
problem is that the last command
never stopped. I had to terminate
it with CTRL/C. Is that the right syntax at all?

Thanks

Anton




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