anthony baldwin wrote:
Greetings,
Last week I lost a hdd (bad blocks, I/O error no. 1117, I think)...It
was my main hdd, with a FC5 installation on it
(the one I had trouble with libpam.so.0 today was a
fresh install on a little partition I made on the old 15gb hard drive
that was sitting here rusting, with an XP install on it, which I am now
using
since I haven''t yet resolved the libpam issue on that install, although
I have recieved instructions from the list on how to proceed.)
And today, my new 200gb hdd arrived from the ebay seller.
So, I am going to try and recover the old 80gb hdd with FC5 onto the new
one with a knoppix cd using ddrescue.
I''ve really, really got to recover some important financial data on
there, and now, because I have an immigration
appointment for my wife''s green card (she''s from Brasil) in two
weeks, and I MUST have this data with me. (Last back up was
almost 3 months ago now, and I need the full updated info.)
This page:
http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/how-do-i-save-recover-data-from-crashed-disks-with-dd-and-ddrescue-command.html
Says I should do fsck on the new drive after copying the old drive to
the new one, but my understanding is that running fsck on an ext3
file system is a bad idea....I''m pretty sure someone, somewhere, on ce
told me that. I haven''t actually run fsck
in several years.
Any advice?
Also, I am unsure whether it is better to simply copy the old hdd to the
new one, and then try to boot it,
or, if I should do a fresh install on the new drive, but leave a 80gb
partition to copy the old hdd onto that partition,
then boot the fresh install and attemp to access my data from there.
Because, otherwise, I don''t know how I''m going to save the data. I
can''t copy any of it to cd while running from
a knoppix cd, because there is only one cd/dvd drive.
Any suggestions?
As always, any and all assistance appreciated....
tony
As I see it, the drive will still read but gave you some block errors.
I would leave the old 15Gig drive as the OS. There are benefits to
doing this.
Use the new 200gb as the /home drive.
Get the new install working and then mount the old FC drive and try to
copy the old /home data to the new /home drive.
I have done this in the past. If the bad block only causes problems
when you read that block, you may be able to recover all but the one
block of data.
You can also make an image of the drive and use one of the forensic tools.
As there is a problem with the drive, I wouldn't try to just copy across
to the new installation.
--
Robin Laing