Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2007 14:19:59 -0600 From: Kevin Kinsey <kdk@daleco.biz> To: stevefranks@ieee.org Cc: User Questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: using dd to duplicate disks/partitions of slightly different sizes - works? Message-ID: <4751C1EF.4010206@daleco.biz> In-Reply-To: <539c60b90712010929m7fef7020v806eb3c1eb24d066@mail.gmail.com> References: <539c60b90712010929m7fef7020v806eb3c1eb24d066@mail.gmail.com>
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Steve Franks wrote: > I've got two 160GB disks. Different manufacturers, so different # > bytes. One is FreeBSD, the other blank. I'd like to backup my system > for the fastest possible recovery after a crash - move the plug and > power up. I have gmirrored before, but I just wanted to do a quick > dd, since I don't want to abuse my cheapo powersupply (has 4 disks > already on it). > > Two questions: > > (1) If I dd from the smaller to the larger, will it work? What > happens to the extra, say 5MB of unused space - will my partition info > be messed up? > > (2) If I dd from the larger to the smaller (df reports only 50% used > anyway) is there a way to make sure there is no info in the 5MB at the > end that will overflow the smaller, and again, will my partitions be > ok? > > The other option is just to fdisk & label the other disk, then rsync > everything to it. Is that the wiser choice? > > Thanks, > Steve Giorgos Keramidas made a great post dealing with this a while back. Here 'tis, quoted for your enjoyment and potential enlightenment (also quoted is Martin McCormack): ----------------------------------------------- >> It turns out that dd defaults to 512-byte blocks so I didn't >> really need the bs=512, but I am not sure I haven't made some other >> type of mistake. The dd command has been running for about 4 hours on >> a very fast system, with a 1-gig processor, 1 gig of RAM and two 31-GB >> drives. One would think it should have finished by now, but it is >> still running. Is this a valid method of copying the entire contents >> of one drive to another? Thank you. Bah! That's too slow for my taste. I would usually go for a newfs, dump, and restore option. For instance, to create a copy of /usr on a second disk: newfs -U /dev/ad1s1a mount /dev/ad1s1a /mnt dump -0 -a -L /usr | ( cd /mnt ; restore ruvf - ) Copying with dd(1) is not as fast :) ------------------------------------------ HTH, Kevin Kinsey -- There is no royal road to geometry. -- Euclid
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