Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Linux Software

Partition Management Software for Linux? 8

Chris Siebenmann is curious about the following: "As part of thinking about disaster recovery for our Linux machines, I'm looking at ways to back up and restore the partition tables of our disks, because it's about the only piece of data about the system that isn't backed up. We've got printouts of the partitioning details (via 'fdisk -l' and 'cfdisk -P') but I'd rather not go through the error-prone bit of typing them in again to partition new disks. Is there any program that saves and restores partition tables? Better yet, is there one that saves partition tables in some reasonably abstract levels, describing the size of the partitions and how they're structured in an editable form, with a restoration program that can cope with a not-completely-identical disk to restore them onto? (Such a program would be a useful part of an automated Linux setup and install system, too.)"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Partition Management Software for Linux?

Comments Filter:
  • If you have any experience with AIX, you will know what a "mksysb" is. This is a system backup which stores as the first file in the backup the complete LOGICAL disk "partition" information. Since you can boot from tapes on RS/6000 machines, you can do a bare-metal restore from tape, and it creates all of the "partitions"/filesystems for you, and restores all of the files too. Of course, AIX uses a logical volume manager, so the concept of a "partition" isn't quite the same. However, an LVM implementation for Linux is available already (http://linux.msede.com/lvm/ [msede.com]), so check it out too. My nascent idea is to make something like mksysb on Linux with LVM, so you can install straight from tape backup (with a boot floppy I guess) and have it set up partitions for you already, like AIX.
  • This software is awesome. It resizes, moves, copies, and checks FAT, FAT32, NTFS, HPFS, and my personal favorite Linux Ext2 and Linux Swap.
  • That program stuffed the file allocation table of my fat32 partition. I had to re-create the partition since everything was cross-linked.
  • Hello

    If you really want to save the partition table,
    all you've got to do is save the very first
    sector of your hard-drive using DD.
    To restore the partition, just copy it back
    (also using DD). It might be handy to have
    linux on floppies just in case you're stuck
    with a dead system.

    I believe you should think about the uses of
    such a thing. Having a copy of your partition
    may be handy if you lose your partition sector
    (it happens, sometimes), but saving a partition
    table in one geometry and restoring it on
    another may be messy. Linux only uses the
    "relative sector" count, but anyway I don't
    believe it's wise to change the disk and keep
    the old partition table.

    As for "changing the partition" on the fly,
    well, I think it would *rule* but it's very
    complicated. Think of your underlying file
    system. It will have to be changed too.
    Files will have to be relocated and things
    like that. In the future, I hope Linux will
    have something like LVM (Logical Volume
    Manager) from HP, but in the meantime, It's
    my opinion that logical backups are the best
    way to protect yourself against failures.

    In the event of a catastrophe, all you have
    to do is reinstall the same version of Linux
    (usually a quick task) and restore all of your
    files from the tape

    Hope it helps
    Paga

Remember to say hello to your bank teller.

Working...