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Date:      Wed, 20 Sep 2000 13:38:30 -0500
From:      "Travis Leuthauser" <travis-lists@winconx.com>
To:        "David Banning" <david@banning.com>, <questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: install new drive problem
Message-ID:  <00b701c02331$f9068e60$97c8723f@travis>
References:  <20000920135043.A439@www3.pacific-pages.com>

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Here's excerpts from a message Chris Clark wrote on July 12, 1999 that I
found in the archives when I was researching the same thing.

Slice and partition the new drive.

for each filesystem you want to mirror, mount the corresponding slice of the
new drive and dump/restore the original filesystem

ie.

# mount /dev/wd0s1a /mnt
# cd /mnt
# dump -0af - / | restore -rf -

Repeat for all slices.

Travis Leuthauser
Network Administrator
WinConX Online, Inc.
225-751-0959
225-752-6517

----- Original Message -----
From: "David Banning" <david@www3.pacific-pages.com>
To: <questions@freebsd.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2000 12:50 PM
Subject: install new drive problem


> I want to replace my 3.4 gig drive with a new 20 gig drive
> I just bought.
>
> While I'm actually running 4.0 Stable - I used my FreeBSD 2.2.8 old
> cdrom set to install the file systems and set as bootable.
>
> Then I booted from my 3.4 gig drive, mounted my 20 gig drive
> and commenced copying all files over with "cp -R" to the individual
> file systems.
>
> There are two problems. One is - the file systems on the new drive fill up
> too quickly, and problem 2: the new 20 gig drive won't boot.
>
> Here is what df shows;
>
> Filesystem  1K-blocks     Used    Avail Capacity  Mounted on
> /dev/wd1s1a     87055    38184    41907    48%    /
> /dev/wd1s1f   2971838  2044310   689781    75%    /usr
> /dev/wd1s1e     58031     9332    44057    17%    /var
> procfs              4        4        0   100%    /proc
> /dev/wd0s1a     98479    40240    50361    44%    /newroot
> /dev/wd0s1f  19048854  7380208 10144738    42%    /newusr
> /dev/wd0s1e     98479     9314    81287    10%    /newvar
>
> you can see that although the new file systems contain the exact
> same stuff, percentage-wise they take up too much space on the drive.
> (eg. 75% of say 3.2 gigs (/usr) should not be 42% of say 18.5
> gigs (/newusr), given that it's the same content)
>
> I realize I'm going about this in a rather self-made way but I couldn't
> find any example of this in my FreeBSD book (bought with 2.2.8)
> and I didn't want to bother you folks without first putting in some
> effort myself.
>
> Any pointers would be appreciated
>
>
>
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