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Date:      Wed, 20 Nov 2002 07:12:30 +0000 (GMT)
From:      Daniel Flickinger <attila@hun.org>
To:        Patrick Hartling <patrick@137.org>
Cc:        freebsd-current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Lost disklabel
Message-ID:  <20021120071230.cFqQ22596@hun.org>
In-Reply-To: <3DD26D6F.4010202@137.org>

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    been there! I only use dangerously dedicated disks, in pairs...

    on the presumption stated that the disks are identical:

	disklabel -r da0 >label.0
	disklabel -W da1
	disklabel -R -r da1 label.0

    In extreme circumstances, I've done a few other things... but
    try this one first; it's safe.

    --
    Sanity is the Playground for the Unimaginative


On Wed, Nov 13, 2002 at 09:19:11AM -0600, Patrick Hartling wrote:

> I have a machine that is running -current from October 10, 2002.  It had
> been running fine for about two weeks--up until I had to reboot it.
> When it came back up, one of my disks apparently lost its disklabel.
>
> Is there any way to recover a disklabel?  If not, I'm willing to grovel
> the disk and try to reconstruct its disklabel (there is really only one
> partition on it that I need to get back, and its at the beginning of the
> disk), but disklabel(8) won't even let me try to make a new one.  If I
> run 'disklabel -e da3s1', I get an error saying "ioctl DIOCGDINFO:
> Inappropriate ioctl for device".  Running 'disklabel -r da3s1' gives a
> "bad magic pack number" error, which does not surprise me.
>
> This is a "dangerously dedicated" disk with a single BIOS partition
> containing four FreeBSD partitions.  I have a second identical disk in
> the machine.  fdisk(8) gives the same information for each, so I don't
> think the BIOS partition is messed up.  Is there something obvious that
> I'm missing about how to fix this problem?


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