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Operating Systems SCO Recovering 5.0.7 from Bootable CD Post 302120533 by teamhog on Thursday 7th of June 2007 12:50:50 AM
Old 06-07-2007
Recovering 5.0.7 from Bootable CD

I've been working with SCO Unix for several years now but have never had to restore a system from a bare drive.

I have a bootable CD that contains what appears to be the correct files necessary to recover the boot and root filesystems.

I've got the BIOS setup such that the CD is the first boot device.

When the CD boots I type

defbootstr Srom=wd(0,0,0,0) link=cha
and I get an error telling that the floppy drive doesn't contain any media.

What steps do I need to take to get the system restore to a bare scsi hard drive?

There should be three filesystems, a root, boot and a u.
Here's what the space allocations look like on the original.

/ : Disk space: 2645.39 MB of 3906.25 MB available (67.72%).
/stand : Disk space: 16.28 MB of 29.29 MB available (55.60%).
/u : Disk space: 56215.66 MB of 62413.10 MB available (90.07%).



Any help is appreciated...
I'm a quick learner, but know that some of this stuff is so far over my head that it's hard to understand sometimes without help.

-

T'Hog
 

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cpio(4) 						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							   cpio(4)

NAME
cpio - format of cpio archive DESCRIPTION
The header structure, when the option of is not used (see cpio(1)), is: When the option is used, the header information is described by: Longtime and Longfile are equivalent to and respectively. The contents of each file are recorded together with other items describing the file. Every instance of contains the constant 070707 (octal). The items through have meanings explained in stat(2). The length of the null-terminated path name including the null byte, is given by The last record of the archive always contains the name Directories and the trailer are recorded with equal to zero. It will not always be the case that and correspond to the results of but the values are always sufficient to tell whether two files in the archive are linked to each other. When a device special file is archived by HP-UX (using the option), contains a magic constant which is dependent upon the implementation doing the writing. flags the device file as an HP-UX 32-bit device specifier, and contains the 32-bit device specifier (see stat(2)). If the option is not present, special files are not archived or restored. Non-HPUX device special files are never restored. SEE ALSO
cpio(1), find(1), stat(2). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
cpio(4)
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