I keep like 10 copies of that thing floating around everywhere, in my house,
my car, my gym bag, work... everywhere.  It's saved my ass a few times.
Plus, if you screw up a windows 98 drive to the point where the windows disk
checker thing dies, Tom's rootboot is about the only way to fix it
(fsck.msdos).

There's another one somewhere that uses 3 disks and has a copy of X on it
also.  I forget the name of it now.  It's not nearly as useful as Tom's, but
it's pretty cool.

Jay

-----Original Message-----
From: David Christian [mailto:dchristian at macalester.edu]
Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2000 10:05 AM
To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
Subject: Re: [TCLUG:23490] Disaster recovery


Man, that was a life saver!  Much more useful than the default redhat rescue
disk!

My honor's project is now safely networked off to another computer which
hopefully will not have the same hard drive problems!

Thanks again,
Dave


----- Original Message -----
From: "Austad, Jay" <austad at marketwatch.com>
To: <tclug-list at mn-linux.org>
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2000 11:52 PM
Subject: RE: [TCLUG:23490] Disaster recovery


> Tom's rootboot!!!
>
> It's basically a rescue disk with a ton of utils on it.
>
> http://www.toms.net/rb/home.html
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jason DeStefano [mailto:destef at destef.com]
> Sent: Friday, November 03, 2000 8:42 PM
> To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
> Subject: Re: [TCLUG:23490] Disaster recovery
>
>
> you might try reinstalling a fresh OS onto a different drive, then
> mount your old partitions as data paratitions and attempt to fsck
> them with you correctly working OS. also explore the alternate
> superblock backups (man fsck?) to increase you chances.
> not sure if there are any other options out there. dont forget to
> check lost+found for file remnants especially if you have very
> important data to recover.
>
>
> At 07:37 PM 11/3/00 -0600, you wrote:
> >Hi,
> >I managed to screw up my hard drive to the point where it won't boot
> >anymore--fsck locks up when it tries to fix it, before that started
> >happening, it was corrupted already due to a bad ./configure script (not
> >written by me, btw) that managed to lock up my computer to the point of
> >making 'ps' not even work.
> >
> >In debugging that configure script I stupidly forced several hard reboots
> on
> >my computer (no real classy way to shut down a computer that can't even
> >figure out the pids of its processes) and now I can't get at the data on
> the
> >hard drive.  Unfortunately, I had my honor's project on there (a large
> final
> >project I need to have finished to graduate from school next semester.)
> >
> >So, generally, is there some way to get at this data if the inodes are
> >corrupted?  Without spending mucho bucks that I don't have on a data
> >recovery team?
> >
> >Thanks,
> >Dave
> >
> >
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