On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 21:41:11 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 6:04 PM, Bruce Cran br...@cran.org.uk wrote:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/RootOnZFS/ZFSBootPartition has a good guide for
installing the base manually (you can ignore the gpart and zfs
commands if you want). I
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 9:58 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
fdisk -s ad4
bsdlabel ad4s1
[r...@blackdragon /usr/src]# fdisk -s ad4; bsdlabel ad4s1
/dev/ad4: 1453521 cyl 16 hd 63 sec
PartStartSize Type Flags
1: 63 1465149105 0xa5 0x80
# /dev/ad4s1:
8
On Wed, 5 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Wed, Jan 5, 2011 at 12:44 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Saw Chris' later message that -F isn't there for him, but here's what
should be, on the data, the sure-fire way to clobber that last sector:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ad4
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 20:06:42 +1100 (EST)
Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Just be sure NOT to use the 'A' option for auto-partitioning again;
I'm sure I saw some problem with that on 8.1, not sure if it's fixed
on 8.2 (Bruce?) so I suggest allocating the BSD partitioning you
really want.
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 3:06 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote
Your dd of the first 71 sectors looked right, MBR looks ok, sectors 1-62
are zeroes, boot1 and boot2 from sector 63-70 seem normal, after you
used 'W' to write anyway; can't say for sure that the bsdlabel is ok,
but see no
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 09:11:55 +, Bruce Cran wrote:
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 20:06:42 +1100 (EST)
Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Just be sure NOT to use the 'A' option for auto-partitioning again;
I'm sure I saw some problem with that on 8.1, not sure if it's fixed
on 8.2
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011, Adam Vande More wrote:
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 3:06 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote
Your dd of the first 71 sectors looked right, MBR looks ok, sectors 1-62
are zeroes, boot1 and boot2 from sector 63-70 seem normal, after you
used 'W' to write anyway;
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 7:11 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Adam, I think you may have missed a lot from the earlier messages in
this thread. Admittedly it's long and likely tedious, but trying to
help somebody get the OS installed is about as basic as it gets for me;
I'd be hugely
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 1:32 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 7:11 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Adam, I think you may have missed a lot from the earlier messages in
this thread. Admittedly it's long and likely tedious, but trying to
help
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 1:51 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.comwrote:
I see now the SD Card was not the install target, but regarding the the
original point to OP was able to preform other normal operations on the card
eg different FS.
I don't really think the OP was pressing W
On Fri, 7 Jan 2011, Ian Smith wrote:
Manual fdisk bsdlabel newfs would confirm that or otherwise, but
Chris will have to hunt up mans, docs and howtos on doing that
himself, they're out there.
Aha! http://www.wonkity.com/~wblock/docs/html/disksetup.html
May/may not be helpful, but the
GMail threadding don't fail me now!
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 4:54 AM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.comwrote:
This is a pretty easy problem to replicate if you are pressing W, and that
issue has existed for quite some time. If you press W then Q at
sysinstall fdisk then attempt to force
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 8:11 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Adam, I think you may have missed a lot from the earlier messages in
this thread. Admittedly it's long and likely tedious, but trying to
help somebody get the OS installed is about as basic as it gets for me;
I'd be
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 2:32 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 7:11 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Adam, I think you may have missed a lot from the earlier messages in
this thread. Admittedly it's long and likely tedious, but trying to
help
If you google the error message in the OP, the first result is:
http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=1675
I read this, while that PR Reporter claims the same error message, the
conditions in which s/he gets it _are not_ the same conditions in which I am
getting this.
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 4:27 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Fri, 7 Jan 2011, Ian Smith wrote:
Manual fdisk bsdlabel newfs would confirm that or otherwise, but Chris
will have to hunt up mans, docs and howtos on doing that himself, they're
out there.
Aha!
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 17:54:32 -0500
Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net wrote:
Next question, from this point (at the fixit prompt) can I preform a
manual install of just base? if I can get the system installed at
this point then all should be good when I reboot.
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 6:04 PM, Bruce Cran br...@cran.org.uk wrote:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/RootOnZFS/ZFSBootPartition has a good guide for
installing the base manually (you can ignore the gpart and zfs
commands if you want). I found I had to copy the base and kernel
directories from the
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 4:27 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Fri, 7 Jan 2011, Ian Smith wrote:
Manual fdisk bsdlabel newfs would confirm that or otherwise,
but Chris will have to hunt up mans, docs and howtos on doing
On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 11:48 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
destroy -F is supposed to mean Forced destroying of the partition table
even if it is not empty. But compare to this thread on the forum earlier
today: http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=20731
Maybe -F isn't
On Wed, Jan 5, 2011 at 12:44 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Saw Chris' later message that -F isn't there for him, but here's what
should be, on the data, the sure-fire way to clobber that last sector:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ad4 oseek=1465149167
which command SHOULD report just
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 16:31:17 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
[.. trimming ccs, selectively quoting and de-gmailing a bit ..]
On Sun, Jan 2, 2011 at 1:39 AM, Michael Powell nightre...@hotmail.com
wrote:
No. I used the of=/dev/ad4 as described above. However, I think you've hit
the nail on the
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 16:31:17 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
[.. trimming ccs, selectively quoting and de-gmailing a bit ..]
Trimmings! Oh nevermind. I don't know what possessed me to go and look
at the debug window. But I do
On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 16:31:17 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
[.. trimming ccs, selectively quoting and de-gmailing a bit ..]
Trimmings! Oh nevermind. I don't know what possessed me to
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 8:44 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 16:31:17 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
[.. trimming ccs, selectively quoting and
On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Warren Block wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 16:31:17 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
[.. trimming ccs, selectively quoting and de-gmailing a bit ..]
I was not around the computer yesterday to reply to these in a timely matter
and replying to each one just got confusing since gmail appends all of my
replies to the bottom of the thread and not after the person I replied to. I
got the reply header to each person and went that route
| Reply
On Sun, 02 Jan 2011 01:39:13 -0500
Michael Powell nightre...@hotmail.com wrote:
Unable to find device node for /dev/ad4s1b in /dev! The creation of
filesystems will be aborted. Then pressing OK brings this:
Couldn't make filesystems properly. Aborting.
This from sysinstall and occurs after
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 01:13:57 -0500
Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net wrote:
No worries on missing it, I'm not sure that helped, I farted around
with it again earlier today with little more in the way of success.
What I tried was to just set up '/' and swamp and it still prompted
me about not
On Sun, 2 Jan 2011 10:22:55 +, Bruce Cran wrote:
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 01:13:57 -0500
Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net wrote:
No worries on missing it, I'm not sure that helped, I farted around
with it again earlier today with little more in the way of success.
What I tried was
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011, Ian Smith wrote:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/da4 skip=N
where N is the known total number of sectors minus 34, should do it?
Argh .. that should be seek=N, not skip. Up way too late ..
cheers, Ian
___
Yes - true enough. Was thinking partition table and typed 'mbr'.
It's all good, I got the cmd right in the end, but alas, it helped me not!
Mmm .. it's not clear from Chris' original message exactly what he did.
I clarified that in a subsequent reply with considerably more detail :D
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 10, Message: 23
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 19:37:10 -0500 Michael Powell nightre...@hotmail.com
wrote:
Ian Smith wrote:
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 5, Message: 10
On Tue, 28 Dec 2010 11:02:45 -0500 Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net
On Sat, Jan 1, 2011 at 11:25 AM, Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net wrote:
I have a 2GB MicroSD card that I am going to toss 8.2BETA1 on, hopefully
later today and see where that gets me.
2GB MicroSD card was a bust, use a 60GB hard-drive and wrote the image to
that, it booted it just fine,
On Sat, Jan 1, 2011 at 10:20 PM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Well, what's commonly called 'the partition table' is bytes 0x1be-1ff of
the MBR, so I was confused by your writing to sector 1 rather than 0,
but have a new theory to test, seeing Chris isn't making any progress;
this
Ian Smith wrote:
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 10, Message: 23
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 19:37:10 -0500 Michael Powell nightre...@hotmail.com
wrote:
[snip]
Try zeroing out the mbr:
Boot a LiveFS CD, then at a root prompt do:
sysctl
On Sun, 2 Jan 2011 01:15:35 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Sat, Jan 1, 2011 at 10:20 PM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
[..]
The bsdlabel lives in sector 1 (counting from 0) of the slice concerned,
specifically the first 0x114 (276d) bytes, in the second sector of the
boot
Ian Smith wrote:
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 5, Message: 10
On Tue, 28 Dec 2010 11:02:45 -0500 Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net
wrote:
On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 2:23 AM, Michael Powell
nightre...@hotmail.comwrote:
Try zeroing out the mbr:
Boot a LiveFS CD,
On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 12:24 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
I don't expect this to be anything like that. Please show a) how many
slices you allocated and how big this FreeBSD slice is and b) how you
partitioned the FreeBSD slice into (and sizes of) / /var/ /usr [/tmp?]
and
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 11:17:48 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 12:24 AM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
I don't expect this to be anything like that. Please show a) how many
slices you allocated and how big this FreeBSD slice is and b) how you
partitioned
On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 9:19 PM, Ian Smith smi...@nimnet.asn.au wrote:
Goodo. I'll try chopping a bit too ..
Cleaning out my cruft, leaving only yours :D
Assuming that's 'oseek=0', which is the default anyway.
yes, a typo in my e-mail only, I got the cmd right in the installer.
Fair
On 12/28/10 16:02, Chris Brennan wrote:
Boot a LiveFS CD, then at a root prompt do:
sysctl kern.geom.debugflags=16 and:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/adx oseek=1 bs=512 count=1
where x equals your drive number. This will zero out any old MBR.
[..]
GARBAGEInvalid partition tableError loading
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 5, Message: 10
On Tue, 28 Dec 2010 11:02:45 -0500 Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net wrote:
On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 2:23 AM, Michael Powell
nightre...@hotmail.comwrote:
Try zeroing out the mbr:
Boot a LiveFS CD, then at a root prompt do:
On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 2:23 AM, Michael Powell nightre...@hotmail.comwrote:
Try zeroing out the mbr:
Boot a LiveFS CD, then at a root prompt do:
sysctl kern.geom.debugflags=16 and:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/adx oseek=1 bs=512 count=1
where x equals your drive number. This will zero out
Chris Brennan xa...@xaerolimit.net wrote:
... could this be the fact that this is a really large
drive and the bios is 'freaking' out (for lack of a better
term) and not properly presenting the disk to the system? ...
The disk is a different spindle-speed then the old one.
[..]
250G -
I've got an HP Business Class laptop (dv2700) and the original 250G SATAII
drive is going bad. So I bought a new drive, got a great deal on an SATAII
750G drive for it, bios sees the drive fine. The old drive had FBSD8.2/amd64
installed and it ran fine. I wanted to reinstall to make some partition
Chris Brennan wrote:
I've got an HP Business Class laptop (dv2700) and the original 250G SATAII
drive is going bad. So I bought a new drive, got a great deal on an SATAII
750G drive for it, bios sees the drive fine. The old drive had
FBSD8.2/amd64 installed and it ran fine. I wanted to
On Sun, Jul 06, 2008 at 01:13:17AM -0500, Joshua Isom wrote:
I bought a second hard drive for my computer since my /usr partition
was getting full. I don't want to deal with hardware raid since I
don't want to be dependent on a certain hardware vendor or chipset, so
I'm wanting to go with
I bought a second hard drive for my computer since my /usr
partition
was getting full. I don't want to deal with hardware raid since I
don't want to be dependent on a certain hardware vendor or
chipset, so
I'm wanting to go with geom. I'd prefer to not have to
backup all my
I bought a second hard drive for my computer since my /usr partition
was getting full. I don't want to deal with hardware raid since I
don't want to be dependent on a certain hardware vendor or chipset, so
I'm wanting to go with geom. I'd prefer to not have to backup all my
data(I know I
I bought a second hard drive for my computer since my /usr partition was
getting full. I don't want to deal with hardware raid since I don't want to
be dependent on a certain hardware vendor or chipset,
you probably don't have RAID hardware to deal, unless you bough 300 or
more $ card.
so
terminated
abnormally, going to single user mode
Enter full pathname of shell or RETURN for /bin/sh:
Do you know what's causing this problem. I'm thinking
maybe my new hard drive is not compatible with my
other pc peripherals (because I have 5.3 running on
the same hard drive specs in my office
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-freebsd-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark Jayson Alvarez
Sent: Friday, December 24, 2004 20:27
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Is this new hard drive going to be useless with freebsd?
Good day,
I
: Is this new hard drive going to be useless with freebsd?
Good day,
I currently have this setup at home and its
working fine with FreeBSD 4.10.
Motherboard: Jetway 830CH
Hard Drive: 10 Gb Samsung
Video Card: SiS on-board
Processor:AMD Athlon 1200 Mhz
My original install of FreeBSD is on a 30 gig hard drive, I want to
move it to an 80 gig I now have, but i don't want to have to reinstall
everything since I've spent hours waiting for some ports to install.
So after googling and searching I found a few ideas of how to migrate
to a new hard drive
a few ideas of how to migrate
to a new hard drive but none which I really trust, (ghosting,
acronis(sp?))
If I do move it over will I have ot make new slices to take advantage
of the bigger hard drive? If this is the case will I lose what data is
already in the slice or can it adjust without any
On Fri, Nov 05, 2004 at 09:13:25AM -0600, CHris Rich wrote:
My original install of FreeBSD is on a 30 gig hard drive, I want to
move it to an 80 gig I now have, but i don't want to have to reinstall
everything since I've spent hours waiting for some ports to install.
[...]
If I do move it
and searching I found a few ideas of how to migrate
to a new hard drive but none which I really trust, (ghosting,
acronis(sp?))
You can do it using standard tools, provided with the base system.
I recently moved all my data to a new 200 GB IDE disk, and kept a set of
step-by-step notes while doing
Hello,
I have always mounted hard drives and edited the fstab file, is there a mount
command that will add the entry for me so there is no mistakes. Assuming the hdd is
/dev/ad2s1a what would be the proper format for mounting this.
Jim
___
[EMAIL
DanB [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
How do I copy the whole harddrive to a larger drive than the one being
copied?
This is an router that cant go down for more than a few minutes. I
want to replace whole system to the new harddirve old one has noisy
bearings. I have no backup at all.
You
How do I copy the whole harddrive to a larger drive than the one being
copied?
This is an router that cant go down for more than a few minutes. I
want to replace whole system to the new harddirve old one has noisy
bearings. I have no backup at all.
First, find a way to make a
How do I copy the whole harddrive to a larger drive than the one being
copied?
This is an router that cant go down for more than a few minutes. I
want to replace whole system to the new harddirve old one has noisy
bearings. I have no backup at all.
Dan
Le 14.09.03, à 17:09, DanB s'est exclamé :
How do I copy the whole harddrive to a larger drive than the one being
copied?
This is an router that cant go down for more than a few minutes. I
want to replace whole system to the new harddirve old one has noisy
bearings. I have no backup at all.
[Tip: Your message did not contain a subject. Choose an appropriate
subject line for your questions in the future, please ]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote to [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
FreeBSD-
If i buy a UATA133 Bare Hard Drive, do i have to buy a disk controller.
Not likely, unless
,
when I just went ahead and booted FreeBSD (on my old hard drive) it didn't
seem to have any problem seeing and writing to the new drive. Is this a
serious enough problem to take the risk of trying to flash an upgrade to my
BIOS?
2. When I booted up using the new hard drive, everything seemed
or there was some feature in the newer BIOS I wanted to take
advantage of.
2. When I booted up using the new hard drive, everything seemed to go OK
for a while, then I got a number of error messages on the console: ad0s1a:
UDMA ICRC error reading fsbn 96639 of 48288-28369 (ad0s1 bn 96639; cn 6 tn
3 sn 60
At 06:25 PM 6/22/03, you wrote:
snip
While it most likely wouldn't hurt anything I
wouldn't make flashing the ROM a priority unless it was having problems
starting up or there was some feature in the newer BIOS I wanted to take
advantage of.
Thanks. That was what I thought from reading various
terry wrote:
Do I have to reboot or kill a process for my new hard drive to be activated
once I've done the fstab, disk labeler and modified my /etc/fstab? I was
able to move and copy onto disk two but it wasn't listed when I did a ls at
root. I had to reboot. I also included 300 Meg's
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