On 2 October 2015 at 15:01, Eric Christopherson
<echristopherson at gmail.com> wrote:
A very generous list member just gave me a
SPARCStation 20 with SunOS
4.1.4 on it. I thought the first thing I would do would be to image
its hard drive in my Linux PC, in case I ever wanted to start fresh.
I assume that if I make a bitwise copy of it, I can later write those
same bits out. But now I'm wondering what would happen if the disk
developed marked bad sectors; would that make an exact image
impossible to write onto it?
The SCSI drives will transparently map out bad sectors, presenting a
apparently defect free disk (except while a sector as actually failing
:) so the image should be fine to any SCSI drive of that size or
larger (or an sd2scsi type device)
I have a disc image of that release, but unfortunately
no SCSI CD-ROM.
It occurs to me that I could perhaps make a SunOS filesystem on Linux
and untar things from either the install CD or the image of the
original HD into it, but I don't know if that would produce something
actually bootable. I'm hoping there would be some way within Linux to
capture the actual format of the filesystem to use as a skeleton.
Does anyone know if this is possible (viz. creating a valid, bootable
filesystem and untarring files into it)? Or should I just invest in a
CD-ROM drive?
You can netboot SunOS on a sparc, which certainly used to be possible
under Linux, using files from the CD (IIRC)
In extremis you could always netboot NetBSD on it and use that to
setup the disk, but you *should* be able to do it all from a Linux
server, modulus some possible annoyances getting a rarpd and
bootparamd to build on recent Linux :)