[lug] Backup
Siegfried Heintze
siegfried at heintze.com
Tue Dec 27 23:41:14 MST 2005
But don't you need a special ROM chip on your network card? I wonder if I
have one on my new network card. Would this solution work if you had to boot
both windows or linux over the network? I don't think so: the NAS server is
either doing SMB/CIFS or NFS but not both -- correct?
-----Original Message-----
From: lug-bounces at lug.boulder.co.us [mailto:lug-bounces at lug.boulder.co.us]
On Behalf Of Bear Giles
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 11:23 PM
To: Boulder (Colorado) Linux Users Group -- General Mailing List
Subject: Re: [lug] Backup
You _could_...
1) take that hackable NAS controller mentioned earlier,
2) make it into a network boot server (see
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Network-boot-HOWTO/)
3) ... profit!
Seriously, you can determine if your system can do a network boot by
going into the bios configuration page. If it's supported it will be
one of the boot options.
Once you have a system that can handle it, you could use a hacked NAS
controller that would allow you to perform a network boot from a
recovery image. A 100+M ramdisk can hold a lot of software. (For the
same reason all of my systems have a 100M ZIP drive as /dev/hdb.) It
looks like it wouldn't be hard, but I've written scripts to generate
bootable CDRs so I'm the wrong person to ask.
You would want to have hot spare USB drives, and possibly even a
hot-spare NAS controller, but those costs are modest.
Bear
P.S., once you have a network boot server it's fair to ask about
diskless systems. Once you're diskless you could "borrow" a Windows box
as needed.
Siegfried Heintze wrote:
> Regarding our earlier discussion on December 20:
>
> So let us suppose I get hacked or type fdisk by accident or a drive fails.
>
> Do I have a disk to boot from if
> (1) I buy hosting and send rdiff backups off site?
> (2) I backup to a USB disk?
> (3) I backup to a consumer grade network disk?
>
> I believe in each scenario, I have to get out the installation CDs/DVDs
and
> install the operating system to boot. If it is a hardware failure, I have
to
> purchase a new hard drive. I'm really slow and it takes me a terribly long
> time to rebuild a dual boot windows/linux system by the time you include
all
> the software development software.
>
> I guess one can boot from the network, but I don't know if my network card
> has the required capabilities. How do I tell? If I do have that capability
> int my network card, would I be booting from another PC's drive or could
> this be a consumer grade NAS or SAN (assume there are such things).
>
> Is there a better way to mitigate this other than my procedure of weekly
> connecting a second drive and using "telinit 1 ; cp /dev/sda1 /dev/sda2"?
>
> Thanks,
> Siegfried
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