Linux partitioned disk mounted on OSOL without formatting
Hello and Merry Christmas...
Quick question after tireless search around the web.
Description:
I have a WD My book world edition II that met an untimely death. However the 2 SATA disks inside seem to be working just fine. Want to add either one of them to my Solaris Desktop.
Since I havent done anything like this before your help is much appreciated.
The disks are of 1TB capacity each and are formatted according to 'a' WDMWEII site in ext3 which would make sense given the overall product. So I'm supposing it IS ext3.
I am running a OSOL snv_134b system updated with Oracle's best and final wishes. I want to manually add the hard disk to my system and access it's contents without formatting it, hence losing them.
The partition ids tell there is RAID involved (Linux RAID Autodetect). If the data partition(s) is/are not directly accessible as ext3, there is little chance you could mount them from Solaris. Even if they are, ext3 isn't supported natively by Solaris/OpenSolaris. There are two distinct projects with the goal to provide this support, one in userland: http://www.genunix.org/distributions....FSWfsmisc.txt and one in the kernel: Quick howto (Project ext3.Quick howto) - XWiki
Ok, will try those. However, two quick thoughts that need clarifying.
Is it possible then to mount them on a linux system. I have a couple and would like to try them if there is such a chance. And more importantly would this be possible through an external case for the SATA drives USB connected to the linux machines?Would that in your opinion work?
And another question:Would booting through a live -let's say,Ubuntu- CD give me the ext3-supporting window I'd need to access the internally connected SATA drives, mount them, copy them and salvage their data?
Using a Gnu/Linux based distribution would definitely be a better approach to recover ext3 data. I cannot tell if ubuntu would be a good choice or not for this software raid support. You might have better luck in a Linux focused forum.
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