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    Solved RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label

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    rhel 4 rhel grub kernel panic ext3 root label
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    • 1
      1337
      last edited by

      You could potentially try to install centos4, or rhel4 is even better, so you get to a bootable system.
      Then just copy the files from the backup over your installation.

      JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch @1337
        last edited by

        @Pete-S said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

        You could potentially try to install centos4, or rhel4 is even better, so you get to a bootable system.
        Then just copy the files from the backup over your installation.

        It is an option I have thought about. I'll be on site this morning, and I will be shutting down the host and booting to a Fedora Live to run dd in an effort to get a solid disk image.

        I tried their built in process on Tuesday and it failed with sector/block read errors. A little digging through the files on the recovery ISO showed that all they were doing was using dd, so I am hoping to use dd with more intelligent options to continue on and such.

        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • DustinB3403D
          DustinB3403
          last edited by

          So this is quite old (15 years) but maybe... Link

          Sounds like you
          lost the label on your boot partition.
          Boot from CD into rescue mode and use e2fslabel to label the partition or
          change the root= to use /dev/hdx in grub.
          
          JaredBuschJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DashrenderD
            Dashrender @JaredBusch
            last edited by

            @JaredBusch said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

            @Pete-S said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

            You could potentially try to install centos4, or rhel4 is even better, so you get to a bootable system.
            Then just copy the files from the backup over your installation.

            It is an option I have thought about. I'll be on site this morning, and I will be shutting down the host and booting to a Fedora Live to run dd in an effort to get a solid disk image.

            I tried their built in process on Tuesday and it failed with sector/block read errors. A little digging through the files on the recovery ISO showed that all they were doing was using dd, so I am hoping to use dd with more intelligent options to continue on and such.

            What's repair solution for bad blocks in a setup like this? If dd can't read because of bad blocks, I'm hoping 'nix has some tool to fix/recover/replace these bad blocks, assuming the data's recoverable on the hardware, otherwise it's a restore time, right?

            1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch @DustinB3403
              last edited by

              @DustinB3403 said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

              Boot from CD into rescue mode and use e2fslabel to label the partition or
              

              I stated in the OP that booting into rescue mode, the label is showing correct.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch @DustinB3403
                last edited by

                @DustinB3403 said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

                change the root= to use /dev/hdx in grub.
                

                I did that also. It still failed to mount it.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • JaredBuschJ
                  JaredBusch
                  last edited by

                  This is the script that performs the backup itself. Well the chunk that does a backup to HDD

                  backup2hd()
                  {
                  	echo "Backup to HD started..."
                  	
                  	AUTOBACKUP=$1
                  	AUTO=0
                  	RES=0
                  	if [ "${AUTOBACKUP}" = "AUTO" ]; then
                  		RES=0
                  		AUTO=1
                  		echo "Auto Full Backup Starts..."
                  		# mt rewind
                  	else
                  		RES=2
                  		AUTO=0
                  	fi
                  	#TODO: Mount check - can't backup to a non-existant or read-only mount point 
                  	RES=0 # Assume all is well - really the mount check would reset this, but until then just "go with it"
                  
                  
                  	# Make temp directory...
                  	# TDR_ROOT is the base directory we are going to use on the mounted volume (e.g. /media/usbdisk)
                  	TMP_TDR=${TDR_ROOT}/tmp/TDR-backup
                  	mkdir -p $TMP_TDR
                  	rm -rf $TMP_DIR
                  
                  
                  	# Size sanity check - can't backup to a device too small.
                  	# -- Exclusion HD list
                  	mkdir -p $TMP_TDR/hd
                  	for HD in $HD_EXCLUDE 
                  	do 	
                  		mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD) # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  		touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD 
                  	done
                  
                  	dialog --title "BackupHD" --defaultno --yesno "Skip size check?" 5 30 	
                  	if [ $? -eq 1 ]; then 
                  		# - Find total size of backup 
                  		for HD in $(dmesg | grep -P "^\s+\S+:\s+\S+\d+" | grep -P "(\d+|>)$" | cut -d':' -f1 | sed 's/ //g')
                  		do 
                  			if [ ! -f $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD ]; then
                  				mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD)  # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  				touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD 
                  				unset TOTALSIZE
                  				unset SIZE
                  				for PART in $(sfdisk -l /dev/$HD | grep -P "Linux$" | cut -d' ' -f1 )
                  				do 	
                  					echo "Checking $PART size..."
                  					SIZE=$(dump -S $PART )
                  					TOTALSIZE=$(($TOTALSIZE + $SIZE	))
                  					echo "$PART is $SIZE bytes"
                  				done
                  			fi
                  		done
                  		rm -rf $TMP_TDR/hd/
                  		# Find device mounted on TDR_ROOT 
                  		TARGETSIZE=$(df $TDR_ROOT| tail -n 1 | awk '{print $4}' )
                  		TARGETSIZE=$(( $TARGETSIZE * 1024 ))  # Convert to bytes
                  		if [ $TOTALSIZE -gt $TARGETSIZE ]; then
                  			dialog --title "BackupHD" --msgbox "Target volume is too small.\nTotal size required  [$TOTALSIZE]\nTotal size available [$TARGETSIZE]\n" 10 60
                  			RES=99
                  		else
                  			RES=0
                  		fi
                  	fi 
                  	
                  	# Check that $RES = 0 so we can continue...
                  	# Otherwise quit this routine.
                  	if [ $RES -ne 0 ]; then
                  		break
                  	fi
                  
                  	if [ -z $PREFIX ]; then
                  		# Default prefix to "YYYY-MM-DD-HHMM_"
                  		PREFIX=$(date +'%F-%H%M')_
                  	fi
                  
                  	RECOVERY=$TMP_TDR/recovery-procedure
                  
                          rm -f $RECOVERY
                  	if [ $RES -eq 0 ]; then
                  		# make restore procedure script
                  		touch $RECOVERY
                  		chmod +x $RECOVERY
                  		echo '#!/bin/bash' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo 'unset SSH' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo '# -- ' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo '# ' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo '# --' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo 'RESTORE_DIR=$(dirname "$0")' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo 'PREFIX='${PREFIX} >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo 'mkdir -p /tmp/TDR-recover' >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo 'tar xf ${RESTORE_DIR}/${PREFIX}system-data.tar -C /tmp/TDR-recover' >> $RECOVERY
                  		mkdir -p $TMP_TDR/hd
                  		# -- Exclusion list
                  		for HD in $HD_EXCLUDE 
                  		do 
                  			mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD)  # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  			touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD 
                  		done
                  		# - restore boot block and partition table
                  		for HD in $(dmesg | grep -P "^\s+\S+:\s+\S+\d+" | grep -P "(\d+|>)$" | cut -d':' -f1 | sed 's/ //g')
                  		do 
                  			if [ ! -f $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD ]; then
                  				mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD)  # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  				# restore boot block
                  				echo "dd if=/tmp/TDR-recover/hd/$HD.partinfo bs=512 count=63 of=/dev/$HD" >> $RECOVERY
                  				# restore partition table
                  				echo "sfdisk /dev/$HD < /tmp/TDR-recover/hd/$HD.sfdisk" >> $RECOVERY
                  				touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD
                  			fi
                  		done
                  		echo "echo \"#--- Sleep for a while to let slow controllers (HP/Compaq RAID's for one) catch up...\"" >> $RECOVERY
                  		echo "sleep 10" >> $RECOVERY
                  		rm -rf $TMP_TDR/hd/
                  		# -- Exclusion HD list
                  		for HD in $HD_EXCLUDE 
                  		do 
                  			mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD)  # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  			touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD 
                  		done
                  		# - recreate partitions (including swap), restore data, re-install grub
                                  for HD in `dmesg |grep -P "^\s+\S+:\s+\S+\d+"|grep -P "(\d+|\>)$"|cut -d':' -f1|sed 's/ //g'`
                  		do 
                  			unset FILE
                  			if [ ! -f $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD ]; then
                  				mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD)  # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  				touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD
                  				for PART in $(sfdisk -l /dev/$HD | grep -P "Linux$" | cut -d' ' -f1 )
                  				do 
                  					# Create partition restore procedure
                  					LABEL=$(e2label $PART)
                  					PART_BASE=$(basename $PART)
                                                          echo "echo \"# === $LABEL on $PART ===\"" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "mke2fs -j -L $LABEL $PART" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "mkdir -p /mnt/$PART_BASE" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "mount $PART /mnt/$PART_BASE" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "cd /mnt/$PART_BASE" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "rm -rf *" >> $RECOVERY
                  					FILE="\${RESTORE_DIR}/${PREFIX}${PART_BASE}.img"
                  					echo "echo \"# --- Restoring $LABEL from $FILE --- \"" >> $RECOVERY
                  # TODO: RSH=ssh RMT=rmt restore -r ${REMOTE_TAPE}
                  					echo "restore -v -M -rf $FILE" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "rm -f restoresymtable" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "cd /" >> $RECOVERY
                  					echo "umount /mnt/$PART_BASE" >> $RECOVERY
                  					if [ "$LABEL" = "/boot" ]; then
                  						echo "echo Restoring GRUB bootloader" >> $RECOVERY
                  						echo "mkdir -p /mnt/$PART_BASE/boot" >> $RECOVERY
                  						echo "mount $PART /mnt/$PART_BASE/boot" >> $RECOVERY
                  						echo "grub-install --no-floppy --recheck --root-directory=/mnt/$PART_BASE /dev/$HD" >> $RECOVERY
                  						echo "umount /mnt/$PART_BASE/boot" >> $RECOVERY
                  					fi
                  					echo "" >> $RECOVERY
                  				done
                  				# Recreate the swap partition
                  				for PART in $( sfdisk -l /dev/$HD|grep -P "Linux swap$"|cut -d' ' -f1 )
                  				do
                  					echo "mkswap $PART" >> $RECOVERY
                                                          echo "" >> $RECOVERY
                  				done
                  			fi
                  		done
                  		rm -rf $TMP_TDR/hd/
                  		
                  		# Now to actually do the backup
                  		
                  		# -- backup recovery-procedure script 
                  		rm -f $TDR_ROOT/${PREFIX}system-data.tar
                  		tar cf $TDR_ROOT/${PREFIX}system-data.tar -C $TMP_TDR recovery-procedure 
                  		cp -v $RECOVERY $TDR_ROOT/${PREFIX}recovery-procedure
                  
                  		# -- Exclusion HD list
                  		for HD in $HD_EXCLUDE 
                  		do 
                  			mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD)  # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  			touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD 
                  		done
                  		# -- backup partition table information
                  		for HD in `dmesg |grep -P "^\s+\S+:\s+\S+\d+"|grep -P "(\d+|\>)$"|cut -d':' -f1|sed 's/ //g'`
                  		do
                  			if [ ! -f $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD ]; then
                  				mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD) # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  				dd if=/dev/$HD of=$TMP_TDR/hd/$HD.partinfo bs=512 count=63
                  				sfdisk -d /dev/$HD > $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD.sfdisk  
                   				tar --append -f $TDR_ROOT/${PREFIX}system-data.tar -C $TMP_TDR hd/$HD.partinfo hd/$HD.sfdisk
                  				touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD
                  			fi
                  		done
                  		rm -rf $TMP_TDR/hd/
                  		# -- Exclusion HD list
                  		for HD in $HD_EXCLUDE 
                  		do 
                  			mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD) # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  			touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD 
                  		done
                  		# -- backup data for each partition 
                  		for HD in $(dmesg |grep -P "^\s+\S+:\s+\S+\d+"|grep -P "(\d+|\>)$"|cut -d':' -f1|sed 's/ //g')
                  		do
                  			unset FILE
                  			if [ ! -f $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD ]; then
                  				mkdir -p $(dirname $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD) # Account for device names like /dev/cciss/c0d0p1
                  				touch $TMP_TDR/hd/$HD
                  				for PART in $(sfdisk -l /dev/$HD|grep -P "Linux$"|cut -d' ' -f1)
                  				do
                  					# dump to file -- remote could be set in the $TDR_ROOT variable....
                  					PART_BASE=$(basename $PART)
                  					FILE=${REMOTE}${TDR_ROOT}/${PREFIX}${PART_BASE}.img
                  					echo "Dumping $PART_BASE to $FILE ..." 
                  					# -B 4589824 => (4589824 x 1024 = 4699979776 bytes) or DVD size chunk
                  					# -B 665600  => ( 665600 x 1024 =  681574400 bytes) or CD size chunks
                  					# dump $DUMP_OPT -M -B 4589824 -0 $PART -j9 -f $FILE
                  					dump $DUMP_OPT -M -B 665600 -b 10 -0 $PART -j9 -f $FILE
                  				done
                  			fi
                  		done
                  		rm -rf $TMP_TDR/hd/
                  
                  #TODO: Package the resulting files into one (or more chunks) ?		
                  		
                  		rm -Rf $TMP_TDR 
                  		if [ ${AUTO} -eq 0 ]; then
                  			dialog --no-kill --msgbox "[Backup]\nBackup is done!" 6 40
                  		fi
                  		
                  		echo "It is safe to reboot now"
                  	elif [ $RES -eq 1 ]; then
                  		dialog --no-kill --msgbox "[Backup]\nThis computer encountered an error\n Try another method\n" 7 50
                  	fi
                  
                  }
                  
                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch
                    last edited by JaredBusch

                    Well dd is moving right along.
                    7D033950-423F-4B36-BE10-8760B0A2FF5A.jpeg

                    I had to use their recovery CD to boot the hardware. It would not boot to any of my USB drives.

                    So that is dd from RHEL 4. The USB disk it is writing to is formatted FAT. So a direct write puked at 4GB.

                    The version of split on there only supports a size tag of m at the largest. So I went with 650MB on the split to match what their normal process creates.
                    b926f719-b4c3-4c04-b186-4c6e93ef6f2d-image.png

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JaredBuschJ
                      JaredBusch
                      last edited by JaredBusch

                      I'm monitoring the progress in console 2 (ctl+alt+f2) with
                      watch -n 1 "ls -lash /dd_manual/dd"

                      A8D5482F-9F47-4B5E-8B0E-7E1E1129E8E4.jpeg

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • JaredBuschJ
                        JaredBusch
                        last edited by

                        Process completed with no errors yesterday.

                        293AE05D-628B-4F33-AC36-196325845B0E.jpeg

                        Now to merge it all back together and try to restore it to a VM.

                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • 1
                          1337
                          last edited by

                          It feels like I'm watching reality TV.

                          JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @JaredBusch
                            last edited by

                            @JaredBusch said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

                            Process completed with no errors yesterday.

                            Now to merge it all back together and try to restore it to a VM.

                            Do you need to merge it? just wondering?

                            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • JaredBuschJ
                              JaredBusch @Dashrender
                              last edited by

                              @Dashrender said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

                              Do you need to merge it? just wondering?

                              How else does it become a single disk image file to import into my hypervisor?

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • JaredBuschJ
                                JaredBusch
                                last edited by

                                So back home, and I have the files backed up in like 4 places.

                                I recombined the .img files and then unzipped them.

                                Getting ready to setup a new VM on Proxmox, but I poked around dmesg on the running system first.

                                SCSI subsystem initialized
                                Fusion MPT base driver 3.02.73rh
                                Copyright (c) 1999-2006 LSI Logic Corporation
                                Fusion MPT SPI Host driver 3.02.73rh
                                ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:02:05.0[A] -> GSI 34 (level, low) -> IRQ 201
                                mptbase: Initiating ioc0 bringup
                                ioc0: 53C1030: Capabilities={Initiator,Target}
                                scsi0 : ioc0: LSI53C1030, FwRev=01032300h, Ports=1, MaxQ=255, IRQ=201
                                ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:02:05.1[B] -> GSI 33 (level, low) -> IRQ 209
                                mptbase: Initiating ioc1 bringup
                                ioc1: 53C1030: Capabilities={Initiator,Target}
                                scsi1 : ioc1: LSI53C1030, FwRev=01032300h, Ports=1, MaxQ=255, IRQ=209
                                Fusion MPT SAS Host driver 3.02.73rh
                                megaraid cmm: 2.20.2.6rh (Release Date: Tue Jan 16 12:35:06 PST 2007)
                                megaraid: 2.20.4.6-rh2 (Release Date: Wed Jun 28 12:27:22 EST 2006)
                                megaraid: probe new device 0x1000:0x1960:0x1028:0x0518: bus 9:slot 4:func 0
                                ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:09:04.0[A] -> GSI 106 (level, low) -> IRQ 233
                                megaraid: fw version:[351S] bios version:[1.10]
                                scsi2 : LSI Logic MegaRAID driver
                                scsi[2]: scanning scsi channel 0 [Phy 0] for non-raid devices
                                  Vendor: PE/PV     Model: 1x6 SCSI BP       Rev: 1.0 
                                  Type:   Processor                          ANSI SCSI revision: 02
                                scsi[2]: scanning scsi channel 1 [Phy 1] for non-raid devices
                                scsi[2]: scanning scsi channel 2 [virtual] for logical drives
                                  Vendor: MegaRAID  Model: LD 0 RAID1   69G  Rev: 351S
                                  Type:   Direct-Access                      ANSI SCSI revision: 02
                                SCSI device sda: 143114240 512-byte hdwr sectors (73274 MB)
                                sda: asking for cache data failed
                                sda: assuming drive cache: write through
                                SCSI device sda: 143114240 512-byte hdwr sectors (73274 MB)
                                sda: asking for cache data failed
                                sda: assuming drive cache: write through
                                 sda: sda1 sda2 sda3
                                Attached scsi disk sda at scsi2, channel 2, id 0, lun 0
                                  Vendor: MegaRAID  Model: LD 1 RAID5  139G  Rev: 351S
                                  Type:   Direct-Access                      ANSI SCSI revision: 02
                                SCSI device sdb: 286228480 512-byte hdwr sectors (146549 MB)
                                sdb: asking for cache data failed
                                sdb: assuming drive cache: write through
                                SCSI device sdb: 286228480 512-byte hdwr sectors (146549 MB)
                                sdb: asking for cache data failed
                                sdb: assuming drive cache: write through
                                 sdb: sdb1
                                Attached scsi disk sdb at scsi2, channel 2, id 1, lun 0
                                

                                I think this tells me that I should try the megaRAID controller this time. I swaer I already tried. But I have slept since then. Tuesday and Wednesday were crazy stressed getting data..
                                c4c6ce3d-8f9c-4ab3-80c3-6e2e76837feb-image.png

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • JaredBuschJ
                                  JaredBusch
                                  last edited by JaredBusch

                                  Well damnit. It does not see the second disk..
                                  869f9c6c-d31d-4411-980d-10b8ebdfe3bf-image.png

                                  Looks like an error during boot

                                  8b5c082d-b43e-4cf9-92bd-ef3f42ffc7cb-image.png

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • DashrenderD
                                    Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    can you boot from a live image and see both disks?

                                    I did a d2vm of a windows 2003 server and I had to run checkdisk like 10 times before it finally worked.. don't ask my why I tried it so many times... I think there is a thread around here somewhere about it.

                                    JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • JaredBuschJ
                                      JaredBusch @Dashrender
                                      last edited by JaredBusch

                                      @Dashrender said in RHEL 4 not seeing ext3 label:

                                      can you boot from a live image and see both disks?

                                      I did a d2vm of a windows 2003 server and I had to run checkdisk like 10 times before it finally worked.. don't ask my why I tried it so many times... I think there is a thread around here somewhere about it.

                                      The restored drives are fine. Can be mounted as previously noted and the label reports correctly.

                                      The issue seems to be that the kernel, as built, is not loading the drives correctly. Potentially because the VM is using a SCSI driver method the old ass kernel does not understand.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • jt1001001J
                                        jt1001001
                                        last edited by

                                        Didn't Dell "back in the day" use or require their own megaraid driver's on Linux?? Can't remember as its been ages since I delt with a 28XX series with a PERC raid card.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • JaredBuschJ
                                          JaredBusch
                                          last edited by

                                          Using VirtIO SCSI (the default selection) the drives are not even seen by tthe recovery boot image. The onyl thing shown is the USB drive holding the data to restore.
                                          e6665609-7ac4-4968-9f75-8f817a852a28-image.png

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • JaredBuschJ
                                            JaredBusch
                                            last edited by

                                            Using VMWare PVSCSI the system won't even boot.
                                            e7671a64-0269-4984-ac2e-1847502f3d15-image.png

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