Hi, I'm interested in the idea of cloning a live, complicated hardware system onto a single external hard drive as a simple backup. I would like this external drive to be completely bootable. What's the best way to approach doing this? I was considering just doing a Gentoo install from scratch but figured maybe there's a way to clone enough of the live system to get me there less painfully?
The system I'm playing with has five 500MB hard drives with most partitions in linked together in various forms of RAID. (1, 5 & 6) That said, the total storage that this system presents KDE and the users is about 600GB. I have an external 1TB eSATA drive which is therefore large enough to hold everything on this system, albeit without the reliability of RAID which is fine for this purpose. The system looks more or less like: /dev/sda1 -> /boot (50MB) /dev/sdb1 -> /boot copy /dev/sdc1 -> /boot copy c2stable ~ # df Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on rootfs 51612920 31862844 17128276 66% / /dev/root 51612920 31862844 17128276 66% / rc-svcdir 1024 92 932 9% /lib64/rc/init.d udev 10240 476 9764 5% /dev shm 6151284 0 6151284 0% /dev/shm /dev/md7 389183252 350247628 19166232 95% /VirtualMachines tmpfs 8388608 0 8388608 0% /var/tmp/portage /dev/sda1 54416 29516 22091 58% /boot c2stable ~ # cat /proc/mdstat Personalities : [linear] [raid0] [raid1] [raid10] [raid6] [raid5] [raid4] md6 : active raid5 sdb6[1] sdc6[2] sda6[0] 494833664 blocks super 1.1 level 5, 64k chunk, algorithm 2 [3/3] [UUU] md7 : active raid6 sdb7[1] sdc7[2] sda7[0] sdd2[3] sde2[4] 395387904 blocks super 1.2 level 6, 16k chunk, algorithm 2 [5/5] [UUUUU] md3 : active raid6 sdb3[1] sdc3[2] sda3[0] sdd3[3] sde3[4] 157305168 blocks super 1.2 level 6, 16k chunk, algorithm 2 [5/5] [UUUUU] md126 : active raid1 sdc5[2] sda5[0] sdb5[1] 52436032 blocks [3/3] [UUU] unused devices: <none> c2stable ~ # /dev/md3 is a second Gentoo installation that doesn't need to be backed up at this time. md6 is an internal RAID used to back up md7 daily. It doesn't need to be backed up, but if the machine totally failed killing all the drives that wouldn't survive so currently I back up md126 to md6 daily, and then back up md6 weekly to an external eSATA drive. What I'd like to do is clone 1) /boot (sda1) including grub and everything required to make it bootable 2) back up the system portions of dev/md126 (/ ) 3) Add some swap space on the external drive 4) back up /dev/md7 which is all of my VMs 5) back up /home to a separate partition on the external drive 6) back up some special things like /var/lib/portage/world and /usr/portage/packages My thought is that this drive is basically bootable, but over time gets out-of-sync with the system. However should the system fail I've got a bootable external drive with all the binary packages required to get it running again quickly. However I can always boot the drive, do an emerge -ek @world, and basically be back to where I am as of the last backup. The external drive will look something like: /dev/sdg1 -> /boot /dev/sdg2 -> swap /dev/sdg3 -> / (not including /home, /usr/portage/distfiles, etc) /dev/sdg5 -> /usr/portage/packages /dev/sdg6 -> /dev/md7 etc.... I will of course have to modify grub.conf and /etc/fstab to work from this drive but that's no big deal. What are folks best ideas about how to approach doing something like this? Thanks, Mark