Re: [g4u-help] Recovering Very Old SCO OpenServer 5 System

2009-06-12 Thread Robert L Cochran
On 06/12/2009 10:35 PM, Hubert Feyrer wrote: > On Fri, 12 Jun 2009, Robert L Cochran wrote: >> Can G4U work with so little system memory? > > Sure, 64MB is plenty. > >> Can it also detect this >> rather old hard drive? > > SCSI is not "rather old". > Question is if your SCSI controller is recogniz

Re: [g4u-help] Recovering Very Old SCO OpenServer 5 System

2009-06-12 Thread Hubert Feyrer
On Fri, 12 Jun 2009, Robert L Cochran wrote: > Can G4U work with so little system memory? Sure, 64MB is plenty. > Can it also detect this > rather old hard drive? SCSI is not "rather old". Question is if your SCSI controller is recognized, but why don't you just bootup g4u and see what happens?

[g4u-help] Recovering Very Old SCO OpenServer 5 System

2009-06-12 Thread Robert L Cochran
I have a really old (built prior to 2002 I believe) "Acer Aopen" system with a Pentium II processor and 64 Mb of system memory. The system runs SCO OpenServer 5 (If I remember from the quick glance...version 5.0.0) on a 4 Gb Seagate SCSI hard drive. The system was custom built on using an Asus

Re: [g4u-help] problem with defect sector

2009-06-12 Thread Hubert Feyrer
On Fri, 12 Jun 2009, Norbert Kanter wrote: > Is there a solution to this? Any trick or hint would be appreciated! Unfortunately not. I never got around to enable the proper code in the 'dd' command used in g4u. (-DSMALL needs to be removed...) - Hubert ---

[g4u-help] problem with defect sector

2009-06-12 Thread Norbert Kanter
Hi! I tried to clone a 100GB HDD to a new 320GB drive with g4u. The first partition on the old disk as 4KB in defect sectors (that's what checkdisk says). Obviously this is why g4u stops the copy process after the first 38GB with reading errors. Is there a solution to this? Any trick or hint woul