I want to start to use Linux to backup my Win98 and OS/2 systems (which
are on a different hard drive on the same computer using OS/2
bootmanager).  I want to do this for two reasons:  (a) no locked files
since the Win98/OS2 systems will be inactive when Linux is running, and
(b) my backup device, a PD650MB rewritable optical drive on ultra scsi
is 10-20x faster under Linux (!!!!).

I plan to use tar with compression (also much faster than anything in
Win98 or OS2 commercially available).

Here is my question:  if I backup every file using tar on my Win98 and
OS/2 partitions and then delete and recreate these partitions (see my
other post as to why I am doing this -- linux's fdisk mangled my
partition table), will I be able to restore successfully using to
following procedure:  (a) tar everything to my PD, (b) shutdown linux
and boot to my a: drive OS/2 boot disks, (c) run os2 fdisk to delete and
recreate the bootmanager partition and the os/2 partitions, (d) boot to
my a: drive Windows boot disks to recreate the windows partition, and
then run fdisk /MBR to restore the boot loader for windows, (e) boot
back to linux a untar everything to windows partition, (f) boot to my
os/2 boot disks, and using the OS/2 tar (gnu) program, untar everything
to the appropriate OS/2 partitions.

Will that work???

I am especially concerned about the extended attributes in OS/2; will
that tar/untar procedure wipe out my EA's???  Is the OS/2 tar program
fully compatible with Linux tar??

Similarly, for Win98, are there any hidden files or other considerations
that would screw up my system using this procedure?

Any help would be greatly appreciated as always.

--
To get out of this list, please send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e
Check out the SuSE-FAQ at http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/ and the
archive at http://www.suse.com/Mailinglists/suse-linux-e/index.html

Reply via email to