Tarl Neustaedter wrote:
Slices are named with letters in OBP-land, the first slice being "a". If it's UFS, slice "c" is the slice which encompasses the whole disk - usually *not* what you want to boot from. It's normally called "backup".
In HSFS (CD-rom filesystem), partitions are named the same, but partition "c" isn't special - its just another partition. Back in SunOS days, I recall the boot partition of CDs was "f". These days, Solaris disks are produced with all six partitions pointing to the same disk blocks so we tend to boot from partition ":a".
With emphasis on "these days". I remember struggling to work out which partition to use on a Solaris 7 (I think) CD a year or so ago.