Hi Folks
This post could equally be titled - is there a God?
Yesterday I ran this command:
[root@morgansmachine DiskBUImagesEtc]# dd if=/dev/sda of=pocketpc.rescue
bs=1M count=33
(No output, just bash history.)
Today I ran these commands:
[root@morgansmachine DiskBUImagesEtc]# dd if=/dev/sda of=2ndstage.rescue
bs=1K count=1280
1280+0 records in
1280+0 records out
1310720 bytes (1.3 MB) copied, 0.0535238 s, 24.5 MB/s
[root@morgansmachine DiskBUImagesEtc]# chown morgan: ./2ndstage.rescue
[root@morgansmachine DiskBUImagesEtc]# dd if=zImage-LAB-20060421.htc
of=/dev/sda
2348+0 records in
2348+0 records out
1202176 bytes (1.2 MB) copied, 0.117155 s, 10.3 MB/s
[root@morgansmachine DiskBUImagesEtc]#
Both yesterday and today I should not have used /dev/sda, but should
have used /dev/sdc... Ouch...
Now I seem to have an unallocated partition of some 37.26GB where once
existed my carefully constructed laptop hard drive.
Everything seems to be running fine, but I expect if I reboot - I wont!
I guess I've just wiped out my MBR or something close.
So, fingers firmly crossed, have I managed to copy enough of my hard
drive with the first two commands to be able to patch back the
catastrophic damage I seem to have done with the last command. Could
someone more confident than I give me some instruction:)
Any help desperately welcome.
Regards,
Morgan.
--
Getting errors: "There are problems with the signature" (or similar)?
Update your system by installing certificates from CAcert Inc, see here:
http://wiki.cacert.org/wiki/BrowserClients?#head-259758ec5ba51c5205cfb179cf60e0b54d9e378b
Or, if Internet Explorer is your default browser, simply click this link:
http://www.cacert.org/index.php?id=17
Morgan Read
NEW ZEALAND
<mailto:mstuffATreadDOTorgDOTnz>
fedora: Freedom Forever!
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Overview
"By choosing not to ship any proprietary or binary drivers, Fedora does
differ from other distributions. ..."
Quote: Max Spevik
http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/08/17/177220
RMS on fedora:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FreeSoftwareAnalysis/FSF