Disk replacement

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Author: Scott
Date:  
Old-Topics: Kevin Mitnick
Subject: Disk replacement
I have a dilemma...

I have a system (at work) that has a disk that is failing. I obtained
another disk to replace it with but have run in to issues...

The original disk is 4g and has the following mount points:

/
/usr
/var
/tmp
/opt
swap (not really a mount point - but it is space used)

The new disk is 20g. I hooked it up, created the (larger) partitions, did
a mkfs (mkswap for swap), created anchor points (/newroot, /newusr, etc)
and mounted the partitions. I then issued the following command:

dump -0f - / | (cd /newroot; restore -rf - )

The above command was appropriately modified for each mount point. When
this was done, I fired up grub and issued this command at the grub prompt:

find /boot/grub/stage1

Grub repsonded with (hd0,0) and (hd1,0) (<- this being the new disk)
I then did:

root (hd1,0)
setup (hd1)

According to all the docs I could find, grub should now be installed in
the new disk. Heres where the problem comes in: When I attempt to boot
from the new disk (appropriate cable and jumper changes), all I get is the
work "grub" repeated forever on my screen.

Has anyone replaced a disk in this fashion and have it work? If so, what
did I forget and/or miss? I am currently at a loss for ideas.

scott


--
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Unix makes anything easy to do difficult, and anything difficult to do,
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