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Operating Systems Solaris Moving file systems from one server to the other Post 303021282 by hicksd8 on Tuesday 7th of August 2018 03:00:38 PM
Old 08-07-2018
Well being professional the first thing you need to do before you mess with anything is to backup the lot. UFS filesystems are dumped using fssnap to take a snapshot (i.e. freeze) a filesystem which outputs a special device name. You then use that special device name to ufsdump the whole filesystem to backup (tape, external drive, whatever). Without doing that first should anything go seriously wrong you are stuffed. Your data is the most important thing!!!

Now, if you are saying that all filesystems are on a SAN then you should be able to get the storage boys to offer the LUNs to your new box. The main thing is whether that new box will boot from the root filesystem without error since I'm assuming that it's not identical hardware so different drivers might need to be loaded. That might take a few tricks. Also, the actual device nodes (e.g. c0t0d0s0) might be different but there are ways to get around that. You will need to manually update files like /etc/vfstab, /etc/system, etc, once the LUN's are swung across to the new box. This way you don't necessarily need to restore anything if you can get away with it.

Alternatively, you get your storage team to allocate new similar capacity LUN's for each and every filesystem, you install Solaris from installation media, and then restore each filesystem from its ufsdump file. You will still need to tackle the issues surrounding different hardware and incorrect drivers being restored.

HOWEVER, provided you have done the ufsdump backups for each and every filesystem, if anything goes bang you can recover. Just be totally professional and backup everything before you mess with it.

Hope that helps.
 

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FSCK_MSDOS(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     FSCK_MSDOS(8)

NAME
fsck_msdos -- DOS/Windows (FAT) filesystem consistency checker SYNOPSIS
fsck_msdos -p [-f] filesystem ... fsck_msdos [-fny] [-x snap-backup] filesystem ... DESCRIPTION
The fsck_msdos utility verifies and repairs FAT filesystems (more commonly known as DOS filesystems). The first form of fsck_msdos preens the specified filesystems. It is normally started by fsck(8) run from /etc/rc during automatic reboot, when a FAT filesystem is detected. When preening file systems, fsck_msdos will fix common inconsistencies non-interactively. If more seri- ous problems are found, fsck_msdos does not try to fix them, indicates that it was not successful, and exits. The second form of fsck_msdos checks the specified file systems and tries to repair all detected inconsistencies, requesting confirmation before making any changes. The options are as follows: -f This option is ignored by fsck_msdos, and is present only for compatibility with programs that check other file system types for consistency, such as fsck_ffs(8). -n Causes fsck_msdos to assume no as the answer to all operator questions, except ``CONTINUE?''. -p Preen the specified filesystems. -x snap-backup Use a snapshot with snap-backup as backup to check a read-write mounted filesystem. Must be used with -n. See fss(4) for more details. The point is to check an internally-consistent version of the filesystem to find out if it is damaged; on failure one should unmount the filesystem and repair it. -y Causes fsck_msdos to assume yes as the answer to all operator questions. SEE ALSO
fss(4), fsck(8), fsck_ffs(8), mount_msdos(8) BUGS
fsck_msdos is still under construction. BSD
April 11, 2010 BSD
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