Date: Sat, 30 Aug 2003 14:17:17 +0000 From: "James C. Durham" <durham@jcdurham.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Ghost for FreeBSD Message-ID: <200308301354.13871.durham@jcdurham.com> In-Reply-To: <20030830130240.GA8401@drachenhorst.fantasy.net> References: <20030830130240.GA8401@drachenhorst.fantasy.net>
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On Saturday 30 August 2003 01:02 pm, Stefan Malte Schumacher wrote: > Hi > > Well, just like the subject says I am for a program or a backup approach > simillar to the one I am currently using. I boot with a Dos-Bootdisk and > use Ghost to backup my Linux-Partitions to a FAT-Partition and then > distribute the images around different computers on the network. I would > like to be able to something like this with FreeBSD. I have had a look at > Ghost 4 Unix but this is mainly oriented towards deploying images via the > network while I just want to store the files locally. The advantage of > Ghost and Ghost4Unix is that is is very easy to restore the system even if > it so messed up that it wont boot. How can I do this ? > > If you use the tools you have on FreeBSD already installed , you can do most of what you want. For an image backup, you can use 'dd'. To back up the whole drive, which is better because you don't have to recreate partitons when you restore, just use the device name of the entire drive, which in this example we'll call ad0 . Let's say you have a machine called 'server1' with lots of disk space at /usr/backups out on your network somewhere. dd if=/dev/ad0 bs=16384 | ssh server1 "cat > /usr/backups/ad0_backup" In this example, dd outputs to standard out because you didn't tell it otherwise and inputs from /dev/ad0 and that is piped to ssh, which fires up 'cat' on server1 and sends the file to it's local disk as ad0_backup. I usually use block size 16384, but you can vary this and pick what works best for you. To restore the file, you need a working system with ssh and a new drive connected. I use drive trays that you can get for 6 dollars US on the 'net so I can connect a new drive easily. (I have an old P90 system that I use for stuff like this with 3 drive trays). So, let's say you put the drive on a working system with ssh and it is discovered by FreeBSD as ad2. The drive has to be the same size as the original (or larger, but that's a waste with dd). ssh server1 "cat /usr/backups/ad0_backup" | dd of=/dev/ad2 bs=16384 Now, move the new drive to the failed system as ad0 and boot it. You can also use tar and ssh to move a partition to a larger drive. cd /usr tar czf - . | ssh server1 "cat > /usr/backups/usr.tar" To restore, you need to create a same-size or larger partition on a new drive and mount it, let's say on /mnt.. cd /mnt ssh server1 "cat /usr/backups/usr.tar" | tar xzf - -Jim
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