Mike wrote:
Dan Thurman <dant <at> cdkkt.com> writes:
What happened was that I spent a lot of time configuring
computer "A", and rsync'd the root filesystem onto disk
at computer "B". I then rsync'd from hard disk to computer
"C" and everything was fine except that the hardware is
clearly different.
I am not sure that copying the root partition from one machine to another
is a good way to install Linux.
Was there some special reason not to use one of the normal install methods
from the DVD or Live CD?
The usual reason for doing this is that you have done extensive
configuration and/or installed local or 3rd party software that would
take a lot of time to repeat. Or you just want to know how things will
work out if you have to restore from your backups on a new machine. Or
maybe your computer died and you really do have to restore from backups now.
Or, you installed under VMware with a different host OS to test
usability and now that you know everything works, you want to migrate
your working setup to real hardware.
It would be _really_ nice if the installer could be re-run in this
situation, offering to fix only the things that needed to be fixed
(re-detect hardware, build a working initrd, install grub, fix your
modprobe.conf and check your fstab and network setup). You can do this
gunk by hand, but it means you have to know as much as anaconda (which
doesn't seem to be all that well documented...) about hardware and
drivers. You can sort-of get most of the effect by making /boot a
separate partition, doing a basic install on the new hardware, then
removing everything except /boot and copying in your old stuff, but that
seems unnecessarily cumbersome.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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