Tom Wesley wrote:
On Fri, 2003-10-17 at 22:19, Andrew Gaffney wrote:

Tom Wesley wrote:

On Fri, 2003-10-17 at 22:08, Andrew Gaffney wrote:


I want to be able to quickly restore my system to a known working configuration from a burned CD or set of CDs. I currently backup my /home, /root, /etc, and MySQL dbs everynight to a tape drive. I also have a second HD that I perform a complete backup to everynight using rsync. What I want to be able to do is rebuild the system in a matter of minutes similar to the way a stage 3 install works. In case the box catches on fire or something equally unlikely, I want to be able to get my system back up and running quickly.

What I was thinking about doing was using the quickpkg utility to create binary packages of everything installed on my system. I would then burn all the binary packages to a CD. In order to restore, I would boot from a LiveCD, create my partitions, extract a stage 1 or 2 tarball (if even needed), and then use emerge to re-install all the binary packages

from my CD. I would then restore my data and configs from the tape backup.

Would this work? Are there any major pitfalls anyone can see? Has anyone successfully done this kind of thing before?

Check partimage. I have used it more than once. One thing worth
noting, after a restore I have had to do a manual "ldconfig" from a root
console before major things (like x) will work. Not sure if it's
generic or something obscure to my setup, but worth a note and saves
some hair pulling....

This does look promising. I may base my rescue CD on the Gentoo LiveCD to start. From there, I'll write a bash script to automate/semi-automate the restore of partitions from multiple CDs.


I would be curious about anything you get in this direction, I currently
backup to a different disk and restore as needed.  Also, not that I'm at
all lazy, but if you write any cron scripts to automate backup I
wouldn't mind a glance.  Have been meaning to get to it, just been busy.

There was a thread here about 4 months back about ways to backup the system. There was a rsync backup script posted that I'm about to modify and put into place.


--
Andrew Gaffney


-- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list



Reply via email to