I thought of that as well, but MarkLogic itself was installed
without problem from an RPM on the same virtual volume.

   I must have messed something up.  I'll tear it all down and
start again.

---
Ron Hitchens {mailto:[email protected]}   Ronsoft Technologies
     +44 7879 358 212 (voice)          http://www.ronsoft.com
     +1 707 924 3878 (fax)              Bit Twiddling At Its Finest
"No amount of belief establishes any fact." -Unknown


On Jun 19, 2013, at 10:01 PM, Michael Blakeley <[email protected]> wrote:

> That should work: x86_64 is x86_64, and I have moved forests around like that.
> 
> My hunch is that the VM bridge to the host filesystem is the culprit. Maybe 
> you could organize enough disk space inside the VM to copy it over?
> 
> -- Mike
> 
> On 19 Jun 2013, at 13:58 , Ron Hitchens <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> 
>>  I have a forest (filesystem copy) from a client that I need
>> to mount and examine on my machine.  It comes from a 64 bit RedHat
>> Enterprise system.
>> 
>>  I built a VM (VirtualBox) and loaded CentOS 64bit onto it and
>> installed the 64bit CentOS build of MarkLogic 6 inside.  I've successfully
>> mounted the Forest on CentOS (after a false start where the filesystem
>> was read-only and ML didn't like that) but the forest status shows
>> that the forest is empty.
>> 
>>  The data all seems to to be present on disk (it resides on the
>> host filesystem, a Mac) and none of the files seem to have been
>> modified.  I shutdown MarkLogic and re-unpacked the forest data to
>> be sure.  I restarted ML and it happily mounted but still shows empty.
>> 
>>  Both are 64bit Linux systems.  Is the difference between RedHat
>> and CentOS enough to make the forest be unusable between them?  I
>> though it was endian-ness and word length that mattered.
>> 
>>  Any ideas?
>> 
>> ---
>> Ron Hitchens {mailto:[email protected]}   Ronsoft Technologies
>>    +44 7879 358 212 (voice)          http://www.ronsoft.com
>>    +1 707 924 3878 (fax)              Bit Twiddling At Its Finest
>> "No amount of belief establishes any fact." -Unknown
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
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>> 
> 
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