* what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... @ 2005-08-27 5:44 Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera 2005-08-27 7:04 ` David Masover 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera @ 2005-08-27 5:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list Hello, group. I was wondering If after a sfdisk resize of a disk, and leaving the reiser4 partitition unchanged, Is it posible to remount the reiser4 partition? I'm not sure, but for what I see, the answer is no... but I would like to be desagree with this. Please! This was how my disk looks like before resizing... Disk /dev/hdd: 238216 cylinders, 16 heads, 63 sectors/track Units = cylinders of 516096 bytes, blocks of 1024 bytes, counting from 0 Device Boot Start End #cyls #blocks Id System /dev/hdd1 * 0+ 2080 2081- 1048823+ 83 Linux /dev/hdd2 0 - 0 0 0 Empty /dev/hdd3 0 - 0 0 0 Empty /dev/hdd4 2081 238215 236135 119012040 85 Linux extended /dev/hdd5 2081+ 85301 83221- 41943383+ 83 Linux /dev/hdd6 85302+ 120670 35369- 17825975+ 83 Linux /dev/hdd7 120671+ 122261 1591- 801863+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris /dev/hdd8 122262+ 123712 1451- 731303+ 83 Linux /dev/hdd9 123713+ 154920 31208- 15728831+ 83 Linux /dev/hdd10 154921+ 238215 83295- 41980679+ 83 Linux I was looking a way to delete hdd6, hdd8, hdd9 and hdd10, put hdd7 (swap) at the end and increment hdd5 just before swap partition. but after doing this, and mounting the reiser4 partition, I just get an empty filesystem :s, why? All I have done is to change partition size with sfdisk and run mkfs.reiser4 on hdd1 hdd5 and run fsck on both. Do I lose my data? or it still missing arround there? Miguel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... 2005-08-27 5:44 what if I touch a reiser4 partition and Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera @ 2005-08-27 7:04 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 13:23 ` michael chang 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: David Masover @ 2005-08-27 7:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera; +Cc: reiserfs-list Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera wrote: > Hello, group. > > I was wondering If after a sfdisk resize of a disk, and leaving the > reiser4 partitition unchanged, Is it posible to remount the reiser4 > partition? > > I'm not sure, but for what I see, the answer is no... but I would like > to be desagree with this. Please! > > This was how my disk looks like before resizing... > Disk /dev/hdd: 238216 cylinders, 16 heads, 63 sectors/track > Units = cylinders of 516096 bytes, blocks of 1024 bytes, counting from 0 > > Device Boot Start End #cyls #blocks Id System > /dev/hdd1 * 0+ 2080 2081- 1048823+ 83 Linux > /dev/hdd2 0 - 0 0 0 Empty > /dev/hdd3 0 - 0 0 0 Empty > /dev/hdd4 2081 238215 236135 119012040 85 Linux extended > /dev/hdd5 2081+ 85301 83221- 41943383+ 83 Linux > /dev/hdd6 85302+ 120670 35369- 17825975+ 83 Linux > /dev/hdd7 120671+ 122261 1591- 801863+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris > /dev/hdd8 122262+ 123712 1451- 731303+ 83 Linux > /dev/hdd9 123713+ 154920 31208- 15728831+ 83 Linux > /dev/hdd10 154921+ 238215 83295- 41980679+ 83 Linux > > I was looking a way to delete hdd6, hdd8, hdd9 and hdd10, put hdd7 > (swap) at the end and increment hdd5 just before swap partition. > > but after doing this, and mounting the reiser4 partition, I just get > an empty filesystem :s, why? > > All I have done is to change partition size with sfdisk and run > mkfs.reiser4 on hdd1 hdd5 and run fsck on both. Do I lose my data? or > it still missing arround there? Um, when you run mkfs.reiser4, it makes a new filesystem. New. As in empty. As in format. The DOS/NT "FORMAT" command is the equivalent of "mkfs.msdos", "mkfs.vfat", and/or "mkfs.ntfs". mkfs == format You wanted to keep your data from hdd5, right? There is a fsck option that might help now, if you haven't touched the disk much, but you've done just about the equivalent of an "rm -rf /". I hope you didn't have anything on hdd6, 7, 8, 9, or 10, because deleting them all and resizing hdd5 would not automatically cause hdd5's filesystem to have the contents of all the other partitions. If you need stuff from there, better restore your old partition table and hope that none of them have been touched much -- I'm not sure if you'll have to fsck or just backup very carefully. And last I checked, reiser4 doesn't have a resizer -- not even a way to grow the FS. So your correct course of action would probably have been to back everything up, resize hdd5, mkfs, and then restore. If you didn't have a lot of data, you could probably have made the new swap device, made a filesystem on it, copied hdd5 to that, resized/formatted hdd5, copied stuff back from the temporary swap partition, change its partition type to 82 (swap), and mkswap. But then, if the data is important, you really should have a full backup solution anyway. As far as I can tell, your hdd5 is 40 gigs. 100 blank DVDs are around 20-30 USD now, and a burner is maybe $50. It would be a long and tedious process, but that could back up 40 gigs and have a few discs left over -- and then you'd at least have one backup. Or, you could probably actually get a 40 gig drive for the same price. I know you've heard the lecture before, and it's little comfort now, but backup is cheap. Data recovery services are expensive. And data loss is unacceptible. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... 2005-08-27 7:04 ` David Masover @ 2005-08-27 13:23 ` michael chang 2005-08-27 16:56 ` David Masover 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: michael chang @ 2005-08-27 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Masover; +Cc: Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera, reiserfs-list On 8/27/05, David Masover <ninja@slaphack.com> wrote: > And last I checked, reiser4 doesn't have a resizer -- not even a way to > grow the FS. So your correct course of action would probably have been > to back everything up, resize hdd5, mkfs, and then restore. If you Yet. AFAIK, as soon as someone funds namesys a few millions or whatever, they'll write one. After vanilla inclusion, and from what it seems, the online repacker. > I know you've heard the lecture before, and it's little comfort now, but > backup is cheap. Data recovery services are expensive. And data loss > is unacceptible. I believe it was you, yes, that learnt this the hard way? ;-) -- ~Mike - Just my two cents - No man is an island, and no man is unable. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... 2005-08-27 13:23 ` michael chang @ 2005-08-27 16:56 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 17:19 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: David Masover @ 2005-08-27 16:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: michael chang; +Cc: Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera, reiserfs-list michael chang wrote: > On 8/27/05, David Masover <ninja@slaphack.com> wrote: > >>And last I checked, reiser4 doesn't have a resizer -- not even a way to >>grow the FS. So your correct course of action would probably have been >>to back everything up, resize hdd5, mkfs, and then restore. If you > > > Yet. AFAIK, as soon as someone funds namesys a few millions or > whatever, they'll write one. After vanilla inclusion, and from what > it seems, the online repacker. Online repacker would make it possible to shrink the FS online. But I don't see why we can't *already* grow the FS, even offline. You don't need a repacker for that. >>I know you've heard the lecture before, and it's little comfort now, but >>backup is cheap. Data recovery services are expensive. And data loss >>is unacceptible. > > > I believe it was you, yes, that learnt this the hard way? ;-) Almost. I was very, very lucky. Note to self: cp, don't mv, and don't try to reattach an IDE drive to a running system! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... 2005-08-27 16:56 ` David Masover @ 2005-08-27 17:19 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2005-08-27 17:25 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 19:44 ` michael chang 0 siblings, 2 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Vladimir V. Saveliev @ 2005-08-27 17:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Masover Cc: michael chang, Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera, reiserfs-list Hello David Masover wrote: > michael chang wrote: >>On 8/27/05, David Masover <ninja@slaphack.com> wrote: >> >>>And last I checked, reiser4 doesn't have a resizer -- not even a way to >>>grow the FS. So your correct course of action would probably have been >>>to back everything up, resize hdd5, mkfs, and then restore. If you >> >>Yet. AFAIK, as soon as someone funds namesys a few millions or >>whatever, they'll write one. After vanilla inclusion, and from what >>it seems, the online repacker. > > Online repacker would make it possible to shrink the FS online. But I > don't see why we can't *already* grow the FS, even offline. You don't > need a repacker for that. Afaik, if any of disk partitions is mounted - re-partition-ing takes effect only up on reboot. Therefore, being able to grow mounted filesystem does not gain you too much. > >>>I know you've heard the lecture before, and it's little comfort now, but >>>backup is cheap. Data recovery services are expensive. And data loss >>>is unacceptible. >> >>I believe it was you, yes, that learnt this the hard way? ;-) > > Almost. I was very, very lucky. > > Note to self: cp, don't mv, and don't try to reattach an IDE drive to a > running system! > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... 2005-08-27 17:19 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev @ 2005-08-27 17:25 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 19:44 ` michael chang 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: David Masover @ 2005-08-27 17:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Vladimir V. Saveliev Cc: michael chang, Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera, reiserfs-list Vladimir V. Saveliev wrote: > Hello > > David Masover wrote: > >>michael chang wrote: >> >>>On 8/27/05, David Masover <ninja@slaphack.com> wrote: >>> >>> >>>>And last I checked, reiser4 doesn't have a resizer -- not even a way to >>>>grow the FS. So your correct course of action would probably have been >>>>to back everything up, resize hdd5, mkfs, and then restore. If you >>> >>>Yet. AFAIK, as soon as someone funds namesys a few millions or >>>whatever, they'll write one. After vanilla inclusion, and from what >>>it seems, the online repacker. >> >>Online repacker would make it possible to shrink the FS online. But I >>don't see why we can't *already* grow the FS, even offline. You don't >>need a repacker for that. > > > Afaik, if any of disk partitions is mounted - re-partition-ing takes effect only up on reboot. > Therefore, being able to grow mounted filesystem does not gain you too much. There are things like LVM, which allow a partition to be extended online. Also, not many install/rescue disks have support for Reiser4 yet, so it would be helpful if one could: - boot random rescue disk - resize partition - boot main Linux installation - extend filesystem Anyway, how hard could it be? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: what if I touch a reiser4 partition and ... 2005-08-27 17:19 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2005-08-27 17:25 ` David Masover @ 2005-08-27 19:44 ` michael chang 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: michael chang @ 2005-08-27 19:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Vladimir V. Saveliev Cc: David Masover, Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera, reiserfs-list On 8/27/05, Vladimir V. Saveliev <vs@namesys.com> wrote: > Hello > > David Masover wrote: > > michael chang wrote: > >>On 8/27/05, David Masover <ninja@slaphack.com> wrote: > >> > >>>And last I checked, reiser4 doesn't have a resizer -- not even a way to > >>>grow the FS. So your correct course of action would probably have been > >>>to back everything up, resize hdd5, mkfs, and then restore. If you > >> > >>Yet. AFAIK, as soon as someone funds namesys a few millions or > >>whatever, they'll write one. After vanilla inclusion, and from what > >>it seems, the online repacker. > > > > Online repacker would make it possible to shrink the FS online. But I > > don't see why we can't *already* grow the FS, even offline. You don't > > need a repacker for that. > > Afaik, if any of disk partitions is mounted - re-partition-ing takes effect only up on reboot. > Therefore, being able to grow mounted filesystem does not gain you too much. So what if I have to resize my partition offline? I'd be willing to accept that (as a consumer), provided that there's a way to make static binaries of said resizer and fit them on a floppy. (I'd, of course, boot Linux via another floppy, or on a disk image on a FAT partition or something...) Similar to the NTFS resize tools. I'd even settle for that at the moment. I can't switch to Reiser4 until I have some form of resizing or repacking, even if offline. I've found online resizing and repacking to be a pain; it's usually much safer to do it offline anyways. Regardless of whether the tools allow otherwise. -- ~Mike - Just my two cents - No man is an island, and no man is unable. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2005-08-27 19:44 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2005-08-27 5:44 what if I touch a reiser4 partition and Miguel Ernesto Pérez Cabrera 2005-08-27 7:04 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 13:23 ` michael chang 2005-08-27 16:56 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 17:19 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2005-08-27 17:25 ` David Masover 2005-08-27 19:44 ` michael chang
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