Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!bu.edu!bu-pub.bu.edu!jdh From: jdh@bu-pub.bu.edu (Jason Heirtzler) Newsgroups: comp.unix.aix Subject: how to recover from a damaged system disk? Message-ID: <80856@bu.edu.bu.edu> Date: 4 May 91 02:46:33 GMT Sender: news@bu.edu.bu.edu Organization: Boston University Lines: 21 Can someone who understands the boot procedure in AIX 3.1 explain how you recover from a damaged system disk, or alternatively how to restore the whole system from a backup tape? The procedure of actually restoring the files from tape is pretty straight forward, but there's some special magic involved in making the system partitions. It looks like bosboot or mkboot can make a bootable disk or tape, but what to do beyond that is pretty confusing. If you boot from a floppy diskette, does this create a ram disk, or does this copy something to the paging area and boot from there, like BSDish unixes do? Also, what's the significance of the logical volume named /blv? Are there any special requirements, like using contigious physical partitions there or on the root lv? At the moment, the only choice that I have is to reinstall the entire system from the distribution tapes and then restore the user partitions and then work back from there. With more than a Gigabyte or two, it's a pretty scary prospect. Thanks for any light you can shed, jdh@pub.bu.edu