Have you assembled you raid devices again (mdadm --assemble /dev/mdX
/dev/sdX)?

That should still work with the disk that was used for your RAID-1, when
that's done you can mount your disk, chroot into it and run grub-install
/dev/sda (and grub-install /dev/sdb, so you won't have this problem in the
future ;-)).


On 2 March 2013 11:10, Francesco Pietra <chiendar...@gmail.com> wrote:

> A further piece on information. With knoppix 7.0,  the procedure for
> examining mdadm arrives at
>
> cat /proc/partitions
> sda
> sdb
>
> RAID1 (md0 md1) is not seen. I assume that this is the way Knoppix
> behaves in this situation.
>
> Thanks
> francesco pietra
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Francesco Pietra <chiendar...@gmail.com>
> Date: Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 10:11 AM
> Subject: Re: RAID1 all bootable
> To: Lennart Sorensen <lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca>, amd64 Debian
> <debian-amd64@lists.debian.org>, debian-users
> <debian-u...@lists.debian.org>
>
>
> Is this recipe devised for installing grub on both sda and sda with an
> undamaged RAID1?
>
> In my case, with the sda that contained grub loader replaced by a new
> disk, the rescue mode  (using the same CD installer for amd64 wheezy)
> did not find any partition. Inverting the SATA cables, same result.
>
> In both cases (I mean position of SATA cables) I went to the shell in
> the installer environment:
>
> #fisk /dev/sda (or sdb)
>  device contains neither a valid DOS partition table, nor Sun, etc
> (expected for a raid)
>
> #dmesg |grep -i sd
>  sda (and sbb): unknown partition table (expected for a raid), however
> md: raid0
> md: raid1
> were identified, along with rai4, 5, 6 etc (unfortunately "| less"
> does not work to see the whole message).
>
> Am I using the Rescue Mode improperly? I was unable to dig into the HD
> that contains md0 (booth loader, EXT2) and md1 ( LVM partitions home
> tmp usr opt var swap EXT3)
>
> Thanks a lot for your kind advice
>
> francesco pietra
>
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 10:35 PM, Lennart Sorensen
> <lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca> wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 01, 2013 at 08:20:09PM +0100, Francesco Pietra wrote:
> >> Hi:
> >> With a raid1 amd64 wheezy, one of the two HDs got broken.
> >> Unfortunately, I had added grub to sda only, which is just the one
> >> broken. So that, when it is replaced with a fresh HD, the OS is not
> >> found. Inverting the SATA cables of course does not help (Operative
> >> System Not Found). In a previous similar circumstance, I was lucky
> >> that the broken HD was the one without gru.
> >>
> >> Is any way to recover? perhaps through Knoppix? I know how to look
> >> into undamaged RAID1 with Knoppix.
> >>
> >> Also, when making a fresh RAID1 from scratch, where to find a Debian
> >> description  of how to make both sda and sdb bootable? (which should
> >> be included by default, in my opinion)
> >
> > You can boot the install disk in rescue mode, select the root partition
> > to chroot into, then run grub-install from there.
> >
> > When grub asks where to install, you should configure it for both sda
> > and sdb.  I think 'dpkg-reconfigure grub-pc' is where that is selected.
> > Might need it to use -plow to asks all levels of questions.  Not sure.
> >
> > --
> > Len Sorensen
>
>
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