Eugene Sevinian wrote:
>
> Hi Tom,
> I have read from this mini-howto (point 4.) the following:
> "...(Note: Contrary to what the man page states,
> the command "mkfs -t ext2 -c /dev/hdb1" doesn't check for bad blocks
> under any of Red Hat, Debian or Slackware.)..."
>
> Is it true for Debian?
>
Hi Tom,
I have read from this mini-howto (point 4.) the following:
"...(Note: Contrary to what the man page states,
the command "mkfs -t ext2 -c /dev/hdb1" doesn't check for bad blocks under
any of Red Hat, Debian or Slackware.)..."
Is it true for Debian?
On Fri, 31 Jul 1998, Tom Pfeifer wrote
Scott,
It may help if you read over this mini-HOWTO which covers this exact
topic:
http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/mini/Hard-Disk-Upgrade.html
I've used the first copy method (with everything on one partition) many
times with no problem. It also gives several other variations of how to
copy dep
On Fri, 31 Jul 1998, Scott Hill wrote:
[ moving partitions snipped ]
: Anyway, I take off the A and use my floppy boot diskette and B and i
: can logon
: and seems ok. I want to boot off the hard drive so I did a /sbin/lilo.
: But can't boot
: off hard drive, just after the fsck check of partit
I am quite a beginner. I am trying to make a clone of my hamm (disk A)
to another
hard drive (disk B). Here is what I did.
1. I put them on master/slave and I partitioned B appropriately.
2. I created file systems on appropriate partitions with mkfs /dev/hdb2
and so on..
3. I mount the B partiti
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