--=-TBV89yChS3p2EGlK620b Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Firewire dirves use the sbp2 module which emulates the drives as SCSI devices (/dev/sda). Stuff like: scsi1 : IEEE-1394 SBP-2 protocol driver (host: ohci1394) $Rev: 530 $ James Goodwin SBP-2 module load options: - Max speed supported: S400 - Max sectors per I/O supported: 255 - Max outstanding commands supported: 8 - Max outstanding commands per lun supported: 1 - Serialized I/O (debug): no - Exclusive login: yes ... ieee1394: sbp2: Logged into SBP-2 device ieee1394: sbp2: Node[00:1023]: Max speed [S400] - Max payload [2048] ieee1394: Device added: Node[00:1023] GUID[0050c501e0016073] [ADS Technologies, Inc. ] ieee1394: Host added: Node[01:1023] GUID[00130600000039b3] [Linux OHCI-1394] On Sat, 2003-02-22 at 17:03, Austin Godber wrote: > Mark Phillips wrote: > > Austin, > >=20 > > I don't have a linux machine with enough disk space. However, I do have= an=20 > > external firewire drive with enough space. How can create a backup imag= e of=20 > > my win2K drive on that drive, and then restore it if needed? > >=20 > > Thanks for helping me think out of the box! >=20 > If Knoppix has support for firewire then you may be in luck. Just boot=20 > with ths Knoppix CD see if Knoppix can mount the drive, if so, then just=20 > dump your Win2k image onto that drive (much like my previous mail,=20 > except you wont be putting it on a mounted samba share it will just be=20 > the fw drive, which will be faster). >=20 > Sadly, I don't own any firewire hardware so I can't say whether knoppix=20 > supports it or not. Maybe someone else knows. I kinda browsed around=20 > the knoppix web site and didn't find anything obvious ... yeah wait I=20 > did. There is an option for "nofirewire" on boot up so it must support=20 > firewire. Give it a shot. >=20 > Once you are booted type "dmesg |less" and see if it says anything that=20 > looks like it is associating a firewire device with a disk device (I=20 > don't know exactly how this will look). But with IDE you see it mention=20 > /dev/hda ... or with SCSI you will see /dev/sd0. Once you know what=20 > device the firewire drive shows up as then you can check to see what=20 > partitions are present on the drive (if you are not sure) using fdisk.=20 > So type something like "fdisk /dev/firewiredevice" >=20 > [Oh for this, and mounting, you will have to be root, so after knoppix=20 > starts up and gives you an X session hit Ctrl+Alt+F1 to get a root=20 > console (you can hit Alt+F5 or F7 to get back to X).] >=20 > Figure out what partition on the drive you will use. "p" prints out the=20 > partition tables, "q" wuits without saving. Once you have figured out=20 > which partition then you can mount that partition using the mount command= : >=20 > mount -t filesystemtype /dev/fwdevice /mnt/test >=20 > then you can ls /mnt/test and see that the files you expect to be on the=20 > firewire drive are there. If so then you can backup to that path. >=20 > Then hopefully you wont need the backup. Actually things go pretty=20 > smoothly in an install. so its not all that much to worry about. >=20 > Austin >=20 >=20 > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss --=20 Bryce C CoBryce Communications --=-TBV89yChS3p2EGlK620b Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; name=signature.asc Content-Description: This is a digitally signed message part -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQA+WB2j/wbq/C6yyPcRAu1GAJwL4ge0Itd6z55EYcwAEiQZTg75KACgj1TK 8nf+q6cWxmGmFA1RkCYBI7o= =Iw7h -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --=-TBV89yChS3p2EGlK620b--