At Sat, 30 Jul 2011 09:12:28 -0500 CentOS mailing list <centos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 7/30/11 2:03 AM, Benjamin Smith wrote: > > On Friday, July 29, 2011 08:02:20 PM Les Mikesell wrote: > > > > > If the machines are pretty much identical, clonezilla should work. Boot > > > > > the machine with a 'clonezilla-live' CD or USB drive. If you can attach > > > > > the target drive to the same machine you can go disk->disk. Otherwise, > > > > > connect to something on the network with enough space to hold the image > > > > > (ssh, nfs, or a windows share) and clone disk->image, then boot the target > > > > > machines and copy image->disk. There is also a server version that will > > > > > pxe-boot the targets if you need to do a large number of them. > > > > > > Thanks for the tip! I'll be trying this out on Monday, but what is the "native" > > way of doing this? > > For disk image copies, you can use 'dd' with the raw disks. But it won't know > anything about the filesystem and will copy all sectors. Clonezilla will use > partclone (or ntfsclone for windows) and only copy the used blocks so it is much > faster with large disks. In any case the partitions must be unmounted or at > least not changed while being copied, so you need to boot from something else. dump/restore is a 'native' file system copy method. Doing this in single-user mode works extremely well, although the really paranoid can always boot up either a live cd or the boot/install cd in rescue mode. I've done this countless times in either single-user mode and sometimes in full multi-user mode (on a 'quiet' system). (dump can dump *unmounted* file systems.) dd can be problematical if the target and source disks are different (sizes, geometry, etc.), since dd will do a literal sector-by-sector copy, which is not generally advisable (and why o why to people *keep* suggesting it? -- it is really a misuse of dd, unless you *really* know what you are doing). > I recommend the ubuntu-based version of clonezilla for better hardware support. > Also, you'll need to fix up the network settings and hostname on each clone > after you bring it up. > -- Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 / heller@xxxxxxxxxxxx Deepwoods Software -- http://www.deepsoft.com/ () ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail /\ www.asciiribbon.org -- against proprietary attachments _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos