Bill Campbell wrote: > On Tue, Sep 14, 2010, Timothy Murphy wrote: >> >>Is there a document with instructions for this? >>I've had smartd warnings that a hard disk in my server is sick, >>so I am installing a new drive (in addition to the old). >> >>I was thinking of copying the old root partition with >> sudo cp -a -P /* /mnt/hd >>(after mounting the prospective new root partition). >>Then I'd have to modify the new /etc/fstab . >> >>Is that a sensible approach? > > IHMO, the most sensible approach is to do a fresh install on a > new HD. After the install is complete, install and mount the old > HD read-only to allow you to copy things over. Well, yes. > > I just went through this process about 10 days ago when a fan > went Tango Uniform on our mail e-mail/file server which had been > up 1,390 days before the crash. The old system had two Urk! What, no kernel updates? > partitions, one for ``/'', the other on ``/home'' making it easy > to copy the old ``/home'' to the new one using any of a number of > tools. I prefer ``cd /oldhome; find . | cpio -pdum /home'' as it > takes care of everything (of course it's important to add the > appropriate users and groups before doing this). > > Using ``rsync'' would also work, but given that the initial copy > is not likely to have anything to update, I prefer ``cpio''. > Does cpio do links, hard and soft? Rsync also gives nice warm fuzzies for progress. <snip> mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos