Hi Jens!
Am 12.07.2004 um 15:22 schrieb Jens Schmalzing:
Hi,
Christoph Ewering writes:
The partition is not mounted when I boot from a MacOS CD. But when
I put the disk into an firewire-case I can mount this partition
under MacOS X.
This usually means that the driver partitions on the disk are damaged.
Mac OS needs them, Mac OS X has its own way of accessing the disk and
doesn't care. Does the disk show up in Drive Setup from the Mac OS
CD? Then you could find the exact location of your data partitions
using pdisk from Mac OS X, create new driver partitions with Drive
Setup from Mac OS, and restore the data partitions with pdisk.
Do you really think it is just a damaged driver-partition? As I wrote
in my first email, I have written new drivers to the drive with Drive
Setup but it does not help.
I know pdisk but I do not know if I understand you right. You want me
to make a copy of the partion-table -- than write a new partition-table
with Drive Setup to the disk and than recreate the old partion-table
with pdisk? Hm, AFAIK Drive Setup just installs new drivers and a new
partition-table no other data is damaged, right? Any less dangerous
option?
How about this:
1. I boot my beige G3 from a ZIP with BootX and a kernel. If I remember
right quik saves a backup off the block it manipulates somewhere in a
file. So I have to get my G3 into linux -- find this file -- and write
it back to the disk. After this the disk should be as it was before I
said "yes" to quik.
2. I can put the disk in my G4. Is it possible to boot linux directly
from hdb9 with OpenFirmware? This could be easier than using a G3. When
the G4 runs linux I write the backup-file with quik to the disk
3. I take a new disk, set it up with Drive Setup -- put it in a
firewire-case -- copy with dd every driver-partition -- put the old
disk in the firewire-case and write the copies with dd to the damaged
driver-partions
Which one is the one with the best chance that my linux-installation
survives?
Bye, thanks for your help
Christoph