  | |  | clone a linux system over the network | clone a linux system over the network 2005-05-07 - By Jean-Philippe CIVADE
Back I've done it using a free project called Mondo Archive. It's more a crash recovery tool, but it's able to do iso images with recovery functions.
http://www.microwerks.net/~hugo/index.html
Yours,
Jean-Philippe CIVADE
> -- --Original Message-- -- > From: taroon-list-bounces@(protected) > [mailto:taroon-list-bounces@(protected)]On Behalf Of Garrick Staples > Sent: Friday, May 06, 2005 9:30 PM > To: taroon-list@(protected) > Subject: Re: clone a linux system over the network > > > On Fri, May 06, 2005 at 09:16:03PM +0200, wolf2k5 alleged: > > Hi, > > > > I need to migrate a Linux system from a server to another one. > > > > I cannot reinstall the OS and applications on the new server and then > > migrate the data from the old server, since that would require too > > much time. > > > > In the past, to migrate a Linux system from a server to a new one with > > HD of the same size, I shut down the servers, booted a Linux live CD > > (Knoppix) on them and used 'dd' and 'netcat' to clone the system over > > the network: that worked fine, but with two cons: > > > > - It is pretty slow, since it will copy over even blank data. > > > > - You cannot resize the partitions: if the new server has a bigger > > disk, you cannot enlarge the original partition to use the additional > > space. > > You should be able to fsck and use the filesystem's grow utility (resize2fs, > resize_reiserfs, etc.) after you dd the partition. > > > > Do you know any better way to clone the system over the network that > > will fix the above problems? > > rsync instead of dd? That will just copy files. Be sure to use --sparse. > > My larger servers tend to have spare internal disks that are informal mirrors > of the real boot disks. I manually rsync them from time-to-time so that I > always have something relatively recent to boot. > > I've done OS upgrades by installing the new OS on a test box, and rsyncing from > the test box to the server's spare disks and rebooting then just rebooting to > the new disks. Obviously this is a very error-prone method because you need > worry about boot partitions, boot loaders, device names, fstab, etc. > > > > I think the commercial application Symantec Ghost can do it, but I am > > looking for something free. > > > > It would be great if such tool supported PXE boot too. > > > > On a separate note, do you know how to boot Knoppix via PXE without > > using the Knoppix Terminal Server (that requires an additional > > machine)? > > I already have a Linux host running TFTP/DHCP/NFS servers and use it > > to perform Red Hat Enterprise Linux installations via PXE. > > How do I configure it to perform Knoppix boots via PXE? > > I haven't found a way to boot an ISO image over the network. I can netboot > linux and dos floppy images (dos floppies are useful to automate BIOS/firmware > updates over the network). > > -- > Garrick Staples, Linux/HPCC Administrator > University of Southern California >
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