Andrei Popescu put forth on 5/19/2010 12:29 PM: > On Wed,19.May.10, 12:46:53, Vince Vielhaber wrote: >> >> A friend was running windows and the viruses got the best of it. She >> sent me the drive so I could get her pics and documents off of it and >> put 5.0.4 on it and send it back (she's a few states away). >> >> What problems (and solutions) should I be expecting when she installs >> the drive in her computer? I'm assuming the network setup will be one >> problem. > > Yes. interfaces(5) will tell you all you need for the configuration > part, but before you send the drive don't forget to delete > /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules. This is the file responsible > for mapping network interfaces to names by MAC. Wired interfaces are > called eth0, eth1 and so on. Pray she doesn't have more than one > (including any firewire adapter) otherwise it can get tricky. > >> My background is mainly in FreeBSD. If a drive is set up as being >> /dev/ad0 and the other machine sees it as /dev/ad4 it won't complete >> the boot, it'll complain with a cannot mount root error. Will that be >> an issue with Debian? > > Could be. The newer installer will setup fstab with UUIDs, but don't > know about 5.0.4 (lenny). You can still modify it yourself though. Use > blkid(8) (package util-linux) to find out the UUIDs and replace > > /dev/hda1 / ext3 errors=remount-ro 0 1 > > with > > UUID=<realy long hex string that is the UUID> / ext3 > errors=remount-ro 0 1 > > (assuming /dev/hda1 is the root partition) > > Grub (the boot loader) can also be an issue, especially since its 'root' > parameter can not use LABEL or UUID. If this is the only drive in the > computer and the root partition is the first one you probably need > > root (hd0,0) > > and you also need to pass the correct UUID as a kernel parameter. > Replace 'root=/dev/hda1' with 'root=UUID=<the very long hex string>. > > Do not edit the stanzas directly, but read the comments at the beginning > of the file. You have to edit (from memory) the 'groot' and 'kopt' > parameters, after which you have to run 'update-grub'. > > Hope I didn't miss anything. There was also recently a thread about > this, you should look it up.
This is why one should always ship the chassis to the geek friend hero, instead of just the disk. Sure it costs more, but one desires everything to work upon receiving the package back from UPS/Fed Ex etc doesn't s/he? [1][2] [1] Cutting corners is the greatest cause of heartache and headache. [2] If something is worth doing, it's worth doing it right. -- Stan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/4bf424da.6070...@hardwarefreak.com