Hi!
On Sun, May 03, 2009 at 09:58:22PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2009-05-03, David dunnoseriou...@gmail.com wrote:
Le dimanche 03 mai 2009 C 00:52 -0400, Daniel Ouellet a C)crit :
[...]
Then I did the image of the drive from the external broken one to the
new clean internal one.
HI,
OK, for the archive of may be for an other unlucky sole that may be
loosing sleep over this like I did for the last two days.
I know it's not an OpenBSD specific subject, but never the less
countless google research, tests and some support emails that kept me
going deserved an archive
Le dimanche 03 mai 2009 C 00:52 -0400, Daniel Ouellet a C)crit :
[...]
Then I did the image of the drive from the external broken one to the
new clean internal one.
dd if=/dev/rsd1c of=/dev/rwd0c bs=1m
And let that go. Took for ever and I had no clue of progress.
You can use Pipe
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Then I did the image of the drive from the external broken one to the new
clean internal one.
dd if=/dev/rsd1c of=/dev/rwd0c bs=1m
And let that go. Took for ever and I had no clue of progress.
Hi Daniel,
Just a heads up, dd(1) prints progress information if it
On 2009-05-03, David dunnoseriou...@gmail.com wrote:
Le dimanche 03 mai 2009 C 00:52 -0400, Daniel Ouellet a C)crit :
[...]
Then I did the image of the drive from the external broken one to the
new clean internal one.
dd if=/dev/rsd1c of=/dev/rwd0c bs=1m
And let that go. Took for ever
Le dimanche 03 mai 2009 C 21:58 +, Stuart Henderson a C)crit :
On 2009-05-03, David dunnoseriou...@gmail.com wrote:
Le dimanche 03 mai 2009 C 00:52 -0400, Daniel Ouellet a C)crit :
[...]
Then I did the image of the drive from the external broken one to the
new clean internal one.
Here's what I would do:
- physically remove the laptop's HDD; since you upgraded the laptop to
a bigger HDD yourself, this shouldn't be too much of a problem.
- look at the disk very closely. Buy the exact same type of disk
again. This might seem unnecessary, but the rationale behind this is
that
If the disk wasn't formatted and you bought Applecare you should have
gotten a copy of techtool (I think they still give that away with
applecare, if not you can buy it seperately). On this bootable disk
is a disk utility that wil have a feature called scavenge. Run it.
It will look over the HD
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Hi,
Now sure if anyone could give me a hint or pointer, but I very much
would appreciated ANY help if there is actually something possible to do.
snip
Hi,
this won't recover your partitions and those things, but as you said your
son needs to access his workfiles
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Nick Holland wrote:
the Use entire disk question changes no more than 512 bytes on your
disk. That's the good news. The significance of that 512 bytes is the
problem. (and while 512 bytes doesn't sound that bad, that's
2^(512*8) combinations...so we still gotta do
Hi,
Now sure if anyone could give me a hint or pointer, but I very much
would appreciated ANY help if there is actually something possible to do.
My Son did a mistake on his laptop tonight in trying to upgrade his
OpenBSD partition to 4.5 and he is pretty devastated at the outcome.
He put
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
...
He put the CD 4.5 in his laptop and booted from it. Then started the
install but at the question do you want to use all the disk space for
OpenBSD he did answer Yes. Right after that even he realize it was
wrong and didn't proceed to anything else, just did CTL-C
On Fri, 01 May 2009 21:55:59 -0400, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Hi,
Now sure if anyone could give me a hint or pointer, but I very much
would appreciated ANY help if there is actually something possible to do.
My Son did a mistake on his laptop tonight in trying to upgrade his
OpenBSD partition to
Nick Holland wrote:
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
...
He put the CD 4.5 in his laptop and booted from it. Then started the
install but at the question do you want to use all the disk space for
OpenBSD he did answer Yes. Right after that even he realize it was
wrong and didn't proceed to anything
Nick Holland wrote:
the Use entire disk question changes no more than 512 bytes on your
disk. That's the good news. The significance of that 512 bytes is the
problem. (and while 512 bytes doesn't sound that bad, that's
2^(512*8) combinations...so we still gotta do somewhat better than
random
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