Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 10 Jun 2005 17:56:09 -0500 (CDT)
From:      Tony Shadwick <tshadwick@goinet.com>
To:        Alex Zbyslaw <xfb52@dial.pipex.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: system cloning
Message-ID:  <20050610175450.J78603@mail.goinet.com>
In-Reply-To: <42AA1653.4040500@dial.pipex.com>
References:  <20050610142559.S78603@mail.goinet.com> <42AA1653.4040500@dial.pipex.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
You expect too much of my RAID controller. :) Ghost won't do it because:

1.  There is only room for 3 drives in the system.  RAID5 requires 3 
drives.

2.  Ghost deals in partitions.  FreeBSD (usually) has one partition with 
many slices.

3.  Doubt it has drivers for my RAID array. :)

On Fri, 10 Jun 2005, Alex Zbyslaw wrote:

> Tony Shadwick wrote:
>
>> 
>> I have a system that we are running in production that there was an 
>> oversight on, and it has a single hard drive installed (32GB SCSI I 
>> believe), rather than a 3 drive raid5 array.  We would like to correct 
>> this, but we have all sorts of up-to-date packages and config files that 
>> we've tweaked that we would hate to just start over on it.
>> 
>> There's a tool for OSX called "Carbon Copy Cloner" that would take care of 
>> this for me, which is basically a series of copy commands that takes the 
>> filesystem from one drive to another, preserving EVERYTHING important, and 
>> then bless the boot volume.
>
> If you want two more identical drives then use dump, not tar, but you'd have 
> to have them sliced/partitioned up the same beforehand and it wouldn't do 
> bootblocks.
>
> Silly question, but won't your RAID controller do it for you?  Or is that 
> expecting too much?
>
> Or what about using Ghost?  No experience of *doing* it myself, but someone I 
> work with did it very successfully just a couple days ago to get a copy of an 
> unbootable <hawk, spit> Linux SCSI disk onto an IDE.  That would make the 
> disks identical.
>
> --Alex
>



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20050610175450.J78603>