I have a Solaris 8 host that has corrupted root disk files and I want to be able to recover the entire root disk from backup to how it was prior to the corruption.
Legato support are telling me that I have to re-install the OS to the same patch level and then resore omiting certain system files. This seems crazy to me: what if I don't know all the patches that are installed?
I have recovered a root disk before using ufsdump/ufsrestore by booting from CD, mounting the root disk partitions, restoring each indiviual file system. Once the restore is complete then you can just boot off this recovered disk.
Because the Legato client and network config is required instead of booting from a CDROM I was thinking of building a basic OS on a seperate disk, booting from this and installing the Leagto client and then restoring each filesystem.
Is there any reason that I can not do this with Legato?
Legato support are telling me that I have to re-install the OS to the same patch level and then resore omiting certain system files. This seems crazy to me: what if I don't know all the patches that are installed?
I have recovered a root disk before using ufsdump/ufsrestore by booting from CD, mounting the root disk partitions, restoring each indiviual file system. Once the restore is complete then you can just boot off this recovered disk.
Because the Legato client and network config is required instead of booting from a CDROM I was thinking of building a basic OS on a seperate disk, booting from this and installing the Leagto client and then restoring each filesystem.
Is there any reason that I can not do this with Legato?