I have made a copy of the / file system from the boot drive on a Debian Squeeze system to a new flash drive as the original drive is about 13 years old, works fine, but I don't want to push my luck too far. I used fdisk to format the new drive, made Partition 1 bootable and then used rsync to copy all the files one can from the old drive to the new one.
It came time to install a MBR on the new drive so I found some instructions which raise a question. I know you are supposed to copy the image of a boot floppy to the first 446 bytes of the new drive which is what I did. This is done by # dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/sdb bs=446 count=1 It appears to have worked but I have not yet installed the drive in the system and booted from it but there was also an alternative instruction: # dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/sdb bs=512 count=2 What, besides the obvious fact that one is copying more bytes, is the difference between copying just the MBR and copying the 1024 bytes? Was this even necessary since I had already made fdisk set Partition 1 bootable before doing mkfs? For anybody interested in doing this, make sure you know your drive device designations as they will be different than what I used in this example and you could really mess up your day if you don't be careful. Martin McCormick -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201204261358.q3qdwn2j028...@x.it.okstate.edu