Toomas Aas wrote:
But if it is necessary, it should be possible to bring the machine up to
single user mode and modify the fstab there, right? Given, of course,
that the root partition is left on ar0s1a.
Yes, that makes fine sense.
Although if you want to feel _really_ good about it, have a live
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On Friday 14 January 2005 18:47, Toomas Aas wrote:
> Derek wrote:
> But if it is necessary, it should be possible to bring the machine up to
> single user mode and modify the fstab there, right? Given, of course,
> that the root partition is left on ar
Derek wrote:
Toomas Aas wrote:
1. Attach one of the new drives to free ICH4 IDE port on motherboard,
partition it and transfer the data using dump/tar.
At this stage, I would recommend doing this in single user mode, to keep
filesystem modifications during the procedure down.
Yes, that was my
Toomas Aas wrote:
1. Attach one of the new drives to free ICH4 IDE port on motherboard,
partition it and transfer the data using dump/tar.
At this stage, I would recommend doing this in single user mode, to keep
filesystem modifications during the procedure down. I typically use
dump for all pa
Toomas Aas wrote:
I have a small server running FreeBSD 4.10, 2 x 80 GB drives mirrored on
Promise TX2 integrated RAID1 controller. I'd like to replace the 80 GB
drives with 200 GB drives.
Here's my current plan:
1. Attach one of the new drives to free ICH4 IDE port on motherboard,
partition it
Hello!
I have a small server running FreeBSD 4.10, 2 x 80 GB drives mirrored on
Promise TX2 integrated RAID1 controller. I'd like to replace the 80 GB
drives with 200 GB drives.
Here's my current plan:
1. Attach one of the new drives to free ICH4 IDE port on motherboard,
partition it and transf