On 10/28/2015 07:40 PM, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
I will try the Debian lvm2 community.
What is the URL?
I am trying testdisk[1].
i want to exhaust all options before i decide to start rearranging the
drives and resetting BIOSs' and CMOSs'.
http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk
The featur
On Wed, Oct 28, 2015 at 9:30 PM, David Christensen <
dpchr...@holgerdanske.com> wrote:
>
> Agreed. But, there's nothing like a business data loss event to convert
> them to the backup religion. If budget is an issue, there are several
> "free" (as in beer) cloud storage and/or backup services to
On 10/28/2015 05:52 PM, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
Yes, you pretty much nailed it. It's an easily $200 solution but (some)
clients can't be bothered to spend it. I am not going to buy them a $200
external drive out of my pocket.
Agreed. But, there's nothing like a business data loss event to conv
On 10/28/2015 07:27 PM, David Christensen wrote:
Check UUID's again
To clarify -- check UUID's against /dev/sd* assignments.
David
On 10/28/2015 05:57 PM, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
The efforts so far have been,
- recreated the logical volume with the same drives (as well as the one
that had failed previously and now seemed to be working and is back in the
same place).
- I can see the logical volume in lvm as well as the device
On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 6:50 AM, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
>
> Lots of replies on a subject you don't know the answer for ;)
>
>
The efforts so far have been,
- recreated the logical volume with the same drives (as well as the one
that had failed previously and now seemed to be working and is back
Lisi writes:
> But grandmothers get maligned far more often than grandfathers.
They just get mentioned more often. Grandfathers are mostly ignored.
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On Wednesday 28 October 2015 13:31:31 John Hasler wrote:
> Lisi writes:
> > Yes, very sad - but I don't believe that, had she lived, she would
> > have turned into a clueless, helpless individual who couldn't use a
> > computer without the aid of a male.
>
> Not a male, a young person. The myth is
Lisi writes:
> Yes, very sad - but I don't believe that, had she lived, she would
> have turned into a clueless, helpless individual who couldn't use a
> computer without the aid of a male.
Not a male, a young person. The myth is that everyone over 60 is
clueless when it comes to "technology" and
On Wednesday 28 October 2015 12:30:29 Martin Read wrote:
> On 28/10/15 11:14, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Wednesday 28 October 2015 01:03:20 Doug wrote:
> >> it is now a system which even grandmothers are using.
> >
> > Hey!! Ada Lovelace was a grandmother.
>
> Not while she was alive; sadly, she die
On 28/10/15 11:14, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2015 01:03:20 Doug wrote:
it is now a system which even grandmothers are using.
Hey!! Ada Lovelace was a grandmother.
Not while she was alive; sadly, she died before any of her children had
children of their own.
On Wednesday 28 October 2015 01:03:20 Doug wrote:
> it is now a system which even grandmothers are using.
Hey!! Ada Lovelace was a grandmother.
Lisi
On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 09:03:20PM -0400, Doug wrote:
> What percentage of Debian users does anyone reading this believe to be able
> to read the source code (if they even know where to look to find it) and then
> to modify it to suit their needs? Surely Linux was a programmer's
> wonderland when i
On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 09:03:20PM -0400, Doug wrote:
> I am not a programmer. (I am also not a user of Debian, but I do keep
> a watch here to see what might be going on in the other popular
> distros.) So I feel it is reasonable to put this out to the readers of
> this list:
>
> What percentage
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On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 09:03:20PM -0400, Doug wrote:
>
>
> On 10/28/2015 12:39 AM, David Christensen wrote:
> >On 10/27/2015 06:10 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> >>You are free to study the source code and help the OP solve his problem.
> >
> >Sorry
On 10/28/2015 12:39 AM, David Christensen wrote:
On 10/27/2015 06:10 PM, David Christensen wrote:
You are free to study the source code and help the OP solve his problem.
Sorry -- that sounds harsh.
I say "study the source code" because the source code is the canonical
definition of what
On 10/27/2015 06:10 PM, David Christensen wrote:
You are free to study the source code and help the OP solve his problem.
Sorry -- that sounds harsh.
I say "study the source code" because the source code is the canonical
definition of what is actually going on. If I can understand the sourc
On 10/27/2015 03:50 AM, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
Lots of replies on a subject you don't know the answer for
My view is that of an independent consultant who must deal with the
harsh realities of time and money via contracts. I responded because
the OP made it sound like he was in a similar si
On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 08:48:17PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> I don't know -- a sufficiently skilled person (or group) might be able to do
> it. I'm not such a person, and don't know of any. Try STFW for an LVM
> project or community.
Lots of replies on a subject you don't know the answer
On 10/26/2015 10:14 AM, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
So just to confirm, there is no way to recover the logical volume.
I don't know -- a sufficiently skilled person (or group) might be able
to do it. I'm not such a person, and don't know of any. Try STFW for
an LVM project or community.
David
On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 01:14:59PM -0400, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
> Hi David. I see what you mean.
>
> So just to confirm, there is no way to recover the logical volume.
>
> FWIW.. I am trying the following
>
> I recreated the LV with lvcreate.
>
> Luckily the old LV spanned the 100% the old LVM.
Hi David. I see what you mean.
So just to confirm, there is no way to recover the logical volume.
FWIW.. I am trying the following
I recreated the LV with lvcreate.
Luckily the old LV spanned the 100% the old LVM.
I can now see the LV.
I then ran ext3.fsck to repair /dev/mapper/data
latest
On 10/23/2015 03:56 AM, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 9:55 PM, David Christensen <
dpchr...@holgerdanske.com> wrote:
You *do* have a back up of your data, right?
No. There is no backup. Is the data lost because it was a striped volume.?
Its not my server and I never worked on it
On 10/22/2015 02:41 PM, Anton Bizzarri wrote:
Hello, we had lost a drive in a LVM on Debian Squeeze. I pulled the drive
and replaced it and then tried to repair it but then when I tried to
recover the LVM it turned out it was a striped volume. (Its not my server!
Never thought they put the data o
Hello, we had lost a drive in a LVM on Debian Squeeze. I pulled the drive
and replaced it and then tried to repair it but then when I tried to
recover the LVM it turned out it was a striped volume. (Its not my server!
Never thought they put the data on a striped volume).
So I returned the original
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