06-30-2008
Quote:
With a bit of luck, you should have a script in /etc called mkrs ( for make a recovery system)
That script does exist
Last edited by malcqv; 07-01-2008 at 04:35 AM..
Reason: Can't spell exist
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I have a SCO Openserver 5.0.6 running Raid 5. and want to make a bootable disk but the boot image is 5MB ie unix file on root is around 5M and the size is obviously too large for a floppy diskette. Please help on how I can make any bootable device. The aim is to change the filesystem size.
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sshokunbi
6 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello all,
I'm trying to recover from backup file to a new system with a new disk. I'm able to partition my new hard drive the same way as my old drive, but I'm unable to boot off of it. I have set the fdisk to toogle as a boot flag. But it does not seem to be working. Does anyone know how to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: larryase
4 Replies
3. HP-UX
hi,
i have a query regarding the size of the LVM header. Since the LVM header of a bootable disk is always 2912KB. The header size of a non bootable disk is not fixed. In Bootable disk after the LVM header (2912 KB=5824 sectors)the user data starts or we can say LV extents starts.
If i extend any... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: gorayen
0 Replies
4. BSD
Hi to all,
Iam using FreeBSD 5.4. I want to write a kernel file with an option "CD9660_ROOT" in it. When i start to compile this kernel, it gives a message "unknown option CD9660_ROOT". Could anyone hellp with this as soon as possible.
Bye,
tadakamalla (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tadakamalla
3 Replies
5. Solaris
The second disk that I'm trying to make bootable is to hold another version of Solaris (9).
I've created the partitions with format and labeled the disk - created the filesystems with newfs - created and mounted the directories.
...but I think I've missed something out like using fdisk to... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: pondlife
16 Replies
6. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
In our HP/Unix system, our master scsi drive was bootable and our mirrored drive was non-bootable. Are any of these alternatives possible:
1) Make the non-bootable scsi drive bootable? How?
2) Create a bootable scsi drive, then copy the mirrored data to the newly created scsi drive?
I seek... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bfisk
1 Replies
7. Red Hat
I am currently trying to create a bootable USB key that I can use to boot a couple different X86 single slot processors. Creating a basic key is as easy as can be but I am looking to customize this boot image to meet two important criteria:
1. The system must boot in text only mode as my only... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kingfish1760
4 Replies
8. Linux
Hi all,
thanks for so many helps in many problems!
Can anyone guide, how to create a bootable cd/dvd from downloaded iso images of CentOS 5? I have collected all the iso in a dvd but it is not booting the system. Any response will be appreciable... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: naw_deepak
2 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi everyone,
I have a custom kickstart file from a software vendor and I'm trying to package that with a RHEL 6.5 and then attach it to a VM and install RHEL with the settings in the kickstarter file. I'm doing this from a windows PC using an app called InfraRecorder.
I've extracted the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: 911Eric
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
vxbootsetup
vxbootsetup(1M) vxbootsetup(1M)
NAME
vxbootsetup - set up system boot information on a Veritas Volume Manager disk
SYNOPSIS
/etc/vx/bin/vxbootsetup [-g diskgroup] [medianame ... ]
DESCRIPTION
The vxbootsetup utility configures physical disks so that they can be used to boot the system. Before vxbootsetup is called to configure a
disk, the required volumes, standvol, rootvol and swapvol (and optionally, dumpvol) must be created on the disk. All of these volumes must
be contiguous with only one subdisk.
The -g option may be used to specify the boot disk group.
If no medianame arguments are specified, all disks that contain usable mirrors of the root, swap, /usr and /var volumes are configured to
be bootable.
If medianame arguments are given, only the disks that are associated with the specified disk names are configured to be bootable.
vxbootsetup requires that:
o The root volume must be named rootvol and must have a usage type of root.
o The swap volume must be named swapvol and must have a usage type of swap.
o The volumes containing /usr and /var (if any) must be named usr and var, respectively.
See the chapter "Recovery from Boot Disk Failure" in the Veritas Volume Manager Troubleshooting Guide for detailed information on how the
system boots and how VxVM impacts the system boot process. The vxmirror, vxrootmir, and vxresize utilities call vxbootsetup automatically.
If you use vxassist, or vxmake and vxplex to create mirrors of the root volume on a disk, you must run vxbootsetup explicitly to make the
disk bootable.
ARGUMENTS
medianame
Specifies the disk name (disk media name) of a VM disk that is to be configured as bootable.
SEE ALSO
disksetup(1M), edvtoc(1M), vxassist(1M), vxevac(1M), vxinstall(1M), vxintro(1M), vxmake(1M), vxmirror(1M), vxplex(1M), vxresize(1M),
vxrootmir(1M)
Veritas Volume Manager Troubleshooting Guide
VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vxbootsetup(1M)