On Sat, 1 Sep 2007, Karl Larsen wrote: > Here is my final paper on using dd. Feel free to shoot at it. > 8. Think of how dd works this way, dd see's the source partition as > just a pile of bytes. what is a "pile" of bytes? > 9. The default number of bytes per Block is defaulted to 150. only in your imagination, karl. > The info DD says > this: > `bs=BYTES' > Set both input and output block sizes to BYTES. This makes `dd' > read and write BYTES per block, overriding any `ibs' and `obs' > settings. > So if in a hurry you can use bs=15000 which will be a good thing because the > IDE hard drive controllers are quite slow. So rather than sending just 150 > bytes per change, you send 15,000. A transfer will look like: > > # dd bs=15000 if=/dev/sda6 of=/dev/sdb5 > > I have not tried this. No reason to think it will not work. karl, why in god's name are you writing documentation ostensibly to help others do things that you haven't even verified yourself? please, karl, do everyone a favour, and stop trying to do them any more favours. all you're going to do is lead someone into doing something disastrously disastrous. and please, karl, for the last time, get a blog where you can publish all this incorrect and potentially damaging guidance. the amount of everyone's time you've wasted in "finally" producing documentation that is still incorrect is really quite breathtaking. rday -- ======================================================================== Robert P. J. Day Linux Consulting, Training and Annoying Kernel Pedantry Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA http://crashcourse.ca ========================================================================