At Tue, 30 Nov 2010 12:26:04 -0600 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org wrote:
On 11/30/2010 12:10 PM, Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
The size has changed. The original CF card was 7637M (255 heads/63 sectors/928 cylinders) The new CF card is 8019M (255 heads/63 sectors/974 cylinders)
I simply do "dd if=cf.img of=/dev/sde" to copy the images to CF.
ARG!!! Don't do this! You really, really don't want to dd a raw disk image (including mbr/partition table) to a *different* geometry disk -- it does not matter what the 'disk' tech is (IDE. SCSI, SATA, SSD, etc.).
Even if the two disks have the same manufacturer and manufacturer part number, different firmware revisions can fail to boot after
dd if=/dev/spinpoint.partnumber.fwrev1 of=/dev/spinpoint.partnumber.fwrev2
Been there, done that, got bit where the sun doesn't shine.
Partition the new disk with fdisk (or something like that), then use mkfs to make the file systems than use dump/restore to move the file systems. Finally use grub-install (or lilo) to install the boot loader.
+1 sfdisk -d /dev/olddisk> /product/partition.layout dump (whatever)
...years later...
sfdisk /dev/newdisk< /product/partition.layout restore (whatever) grub-install (magic tbd) # SHIP IT
I'm not positive, but I'd expect clonezilla to get this right - and probably be able to expand the partition after the copy for you. Plus it will save time compared to dd by not needing to copy unused disk blocks and it can save a compressed image on a file server for repeated cloning.
Right. clonezilla is much more than dd. I would suspect that clonezilla is a bundling of sfdisk, dump/restore, and grub-install, or something link that.
-- Les Mikesell lesmikesesll@gmail.com
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