Upgrade from RH8 to FC1 hangs with GRUB
Wolfgang
wolfgang at rpi.net.au
Thu Jan 22 12:23:34 UTC 2004
On Thu, 2004-01-22 at 07:04, John Rumball wrote:
> Phil,
>
> Thanks for taking the time to post your detailed response. I will file
> it for future reference because I was able to solve my problem and
> finally boot from the new disk. This is how...
>
> When I first used ghost to image my old disk to the new disk, I used
> Ghost 7.5 AND accepted the default sizes that ghost selected for the
> partitions on the new disk. That is, it increased the size of my boot
> partition (hda1).
>
> I found a document on the Symantec site that talks specifically about a
> problem using Ghost 7.5 and earlier to image Linux partitions that use
> the Grub loader. Imagine!! So, I decided to re-ghost my old disk, this
> time using Ghost 8.0. I also decided to leave the boot partition the
> same size as on the old disk. When I subsequently tried to boot from
> the new drive everything worked as hoped!!!
>
> Thank you to everyone who offered their assistance.
>
> The open source community rules!!
>
>
> John Rumball
>
>
> > On Wed, 2004-01-21 at 12:19, John Rumball wrote:
> > > That line must have been commented out by anaconda.
> >
> > My guess as well. Had wondered about why, but it works that way so
> > never dug in to find out.
> >
> > > I notice that it
> > > is also commented out on my FC1 box at home (which also has hda1,
> hda2,
> > > hda3 and was recently upgraded from RH8) and on the old drive I am
> > > replacing in this box.
> > >
> > > I should also mention that I tried booting off my old drive and it
> > > worked just fine, although it loaded RH8 and not FC1. I guess this
> > > confirms that my previously attempted yum upgrade never completed
> > > properly!
> >
> > Sounds like it. From your original message it appears the actual
> > install of the new RPMS never started. Haven't used Ghost for this
> kind
> > of cloning but it seems that something messed up. Presumably you had
> to
> > configure the old drive as master or single (/dev/hda) to get the
> system
> > to boot back to RH8. If the new drive is configured as slave, can
> still
> > boot to the old one?
> >
> > If so, and if you still want to try an upgrade to preserve old
> settings
> > etc., I'd try "cloning" the running system on the old drive under
> Linux
> > to the new one configured as a slave drive (/dev/hdb).
> >
> > Something along these lines has worked for me:
> >
> > dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hdb bs=512 count=1 # Kill old MBR
> > fdisk /dev/hdb # create partitions as desired
> > ...
> > Then
> > mke2fs -j /dev/hda1
> > mke2fs -j /dev/hda2
> > mkswap /dev/hda3
> > mkdir /alt
> > mount /dev/hda2 /alt
> > mkdir /alt/boot
> > mount /dev/hda1 /alt/boot
> > cp -aux /boot /alt
> > cp -aux / /alt
> >
> > Make a grub boot floppy so you can boot either instance in a pinch.
> >
> > This script (I call it mkgrubmenu and it lives in /root/bin) may help
> > (did for Paolo):
> > -------------------------------------------------------------------
> > #!/bin/bash
> > # mkgrubmenu
> > #
> > # Written by Phil Schaffner <p.r.schaffner at ieee.org>
> > # based on mkbootdisk by Erik Troan <ewt at redhat.com>
> >
> > pause=yes
> > format=yes
> > device=/dev/fd0
> > unset verbose
> >
> > GRUBDIR=/boot/grub
> > MOUNTDIR=/tmp/mkgrubmenu
> > PATH=/sbin:$PATH
> > export PATH
> >
> > VERSION=0.1
> >
> > usage () {
> > cat >&2 <<EOF
> > usage: `basename $0` [--version] [--noprompt] [--noformat]
> > [--device <devicefile>] [--grubdir <dir>] [--verbose -v]
> > (ex: `basename $0` --device /dev/fd1)
> > EOF
> > exit $1
> > }
> >
> > while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
> > case $1 in
> > --device)
> > shift
> > device=$1
> > ;;
> > --grubdir)
> > shift
> > GRUBDIR=$1
> > ;;
> > --help)
> > usage 0
> > ;;
> > --noprompt)
> > unset pause
> > ;;
> > --noformat)
> > unset format
> > ;;
> > -v)
> > verbose=true
> > ;;
> > --verbose)
> > verbose=true
> > ;;
> > --version)
> > echo "mkgrubdisk: version $VERSION"
> > exit 0
> > ;;
> > *)
> > usage
> > ;;
> > esac
> >
> > shift
> > done
> >
> > [ -d $GRUBDIR ] || {
> > echo "$GRUBDIR is not a directory!" >&2
> > exit 1
> > }
> >
> >
> >
> > if [ -e "$device" ]; then {
> > [ -n "$pause" ] && {
> > echo -n "Insert a"
> > [ -n "$format" ] || echo -n " vfat formatted"
> > echo " disk in $device."
> > echo "Any information on the disk will be lost."
> > echo -n "Press <Enter> to continue or ^C to abort: "
> > read aline
> > }
> >
> > [ -n "$format" ] && {
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo "Formatting $device... "
> > fdformat $device || exit 0
> > mkfs.msdos $device > /dev/null 2>/dev/null || exit 0
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo "done."
> > }
> >
> > rm -rf $MOUNTDIR
> > mkdir $MOUNTDIR || {
> > echo "Failed to create $MOUNTDIR" >&2
> > exit 1
> > }
> > [ -d $MOUNTDIR ] || {
> > echo "$MOUNTDIR is not a directory!" >&2
> > exit 1
> > }
> >
> > mount -wt vfat $device $MOUNTDIR || {
> > rmdir $MOUNTDIR
> > exit 1
> > }
> >
> > mkdir $MOUNTDIR/grub
> >
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo -n "Copying $GRUBDIR files... "
> > cd $GRUBDIR
> > cp -a stage1 stage2 grub.conf device.map $MOUNTDIR/grub
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo "done."
> >
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo -n "Setting up GRUB... "
> > grub --device-map=$GRUBDIR/device.map --batch <<EOF
> > root (fd0)
> > setup (fd0)
> > quit
> > EOF
> >
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo "done."
> >
> > umount $MOUNTDIR
> > rmdir $MOUNTDIR
> > [ -n "$verbose" ] && echo "done setting up GRUB."
> > echo "edit (fd0)/grub/grub.conf to customize."
> > }
> > else
> > echo "$device does not exist"
> > fi
> >
> > ---------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > Configure the new drive as single (recommended to avoid possible MBR
> > confusion) or master, with the old one either removed or as slave.
> Boot
> > using the floppy, and (assuming success) log on as root and do the
> > following:
> >
> > grub
> > root (hd0,0)
> > setup (hd0)
> > quit
> >
> > You SHOULD, with any luck, then be able to reboot from the new disk
> and
> > continue with the upgrade.
> >
> > Check out
> > http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/~vschmidt/notes/redhat2fedora/
> > for good hints on how to upgrade with yum.
> >
> > Should also be possible to boot either instance of Linux with both
> disks
> > installed if you appropriately edit /boot/grub/grub.conf, and
> > /alt/etc/fstab and /alt/etc/mtab on the /dev/hdb2 partition, but won't
> > go into all that detail here.
> >
> > Good luck!
> >
> > Phil
Good to see it's working ok now. You should be able to repartition it
with Ghost now too. As I've used it on RH7.3, 8.0 & 9 without problems.
(And that's also the whole point of being able to use ghost to upgrade
to a larger HDD when needed. As I keep a copy of it on a bootable CD-R.)
The only thing I have encountered with Ghost, was the booting problem
from time to time (Which can be corrected by what I mentioned in my
first post. And that the older versions 5->7 wouldn't handle the Linux
Ext3 system too well, where as you found out that version 8 does it
nicely.
Wolf
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