On Fri, 27 May 2005, David Witbrodt wrote:
> I just installed Debian for the first time. I have two hard drives, one on > the motherboard IDE controller and a bigger, better one on a PCI controller > card. > > I wanted to install Debian to the drive attached to the PCI controller, but > the installer didn't recognize the card, so I was forced to install Debian to > the old drive. Then, the installer installed a kernel that _did_ recognize > the PCI controller, so now that Debian is installed to the wrong place I am > able to partition and use the drive where I wanted Debian to be in the first > place! differences between the (cd/net) install kernel and the installed systenm kernel nibbled your butt eh > I need advice from experienced users on how to move a working Debian from > here: > > / /dev/hda7 > swap /dev/hda5 > > to here: > > /dev/hdg5 / > /dev/hdg2 /boot > /dev/hdg6 /usr > /dev/hdg7 /tmp > /dev/hdg8 /var > /dev/hdg9 /home > > As a newbie, I'm in danger of doing some real stupid things. My first guess > at a solution would involve the following steps: some mb system bios will NOT let you boot from PCI controllers you can keep your grub info on /dev/hda ... and boot into / which is on /dev/hdg5 > 1. Copy (recursive) each corresponding directory to the appropriate > partitions > 2. Modify certain config files to point at the new partitions only need to change /etc/fstab > 3. Modify grub settings, especially 'menu.lst' and use grub-install to write > the MBR on > the new drive. (I am going to alter the BIOS settings so that the new drive > boots first -- the controller card has its own BIOS and supports this feature > -- but that means the original install of grub to the old drive's MBR will no > longer operate.) be sure you have a way to boot the system if your "transfer failed" ( boot from floppy, boot from network, boot from cd, .. ) c ya alvin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]