Bill Davidsen wrote:
Neil Brown wrote:
On Saturday December 23, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I hope I can use the md code to solve a problem, although in a way probably not envisioned by the author(s).

I have a disk image, a physical dump of every sector from start to finish, including the partition table. What I hope I can do is to create a one drive RAID-1 partitionable array, and then access it with fdisk or similar. These partitions are not "nice" types such as FAT, VFAT, ext2, etc, this is an odd disk, and I "saved it" by saving everything. Now I'd like to start dismembering the information and putting it into useful pieces. I even dare to hope that I could get the original software running on a virtual machine at some point.

The other alternative is to loopback mount it, I'm somewhat reluctant to do that if I can avoid it.

Yes, the partition table is standard in format if not in content.

Maybe...
Is this image in a file?
md only works with block devices, so you would need to use the 'loop'
driver to create a block-device "/dev/loopX".
I was thinking nbd, actually.
But as loop devices cannot be partitioned, you could then
  mdadm -Bf /dev/md/d9 -amdp8 -l1 -f -n1 /dev/loopX
  and then look at the partitions in /dev/md/d9_*

Should work.
Sounds worth a try. Will be a learning experience if nothing else.

Rather than setup nbd I did try a loop mount, and the whole process worked flawlessly. I was able to look at partitions, read the partition table, and generally do anything I could from a device. It worked so well I backed it up as an image, just in case I ever want to do something else with it.

Many thanks.

--
bill davidsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 CTO TMR Associates, Inc
 Doing interesting things with small computers since 1979

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