On Thu, Oct 31, 2002 at 10:58:46AM -0600, Jason Lanpher wrote:
> Finally an answer that I know.  When I was looking for doc's on this
> same topic I checed out this site:
> http://www.9thtee.com/tivoupgrades.htm  This site has allot of infor on
> obtaining parts for your TV.  But it also has links to website with info
> about hacking your Tivo.  This site was also a good resource as well
> http://hellcat.tyger.org/MFS/2.0/howto.html

I have the mfstools CD and I have printed out just about all of the
howtos, but I'm still not satisfied with the directions.  Here are my
gripes:

1. Windows centric

	All of the directions I've seen so far assume that you're going
	to back up onto your Windows C: drive.  I don't have a Windows
	C: drive.  In fact, I don't have an ext2 partition except for my
	small /boot partition.  Everything else is XFS. 

2. MFS tools ISO didn't boot

	Ok, this is probably something to do with my system.  I don't
	understand why, but I can't boot the CD.  I can boot the Debian
	install CDs just fine.  I can boot the CD inside VMware, but I
	can't get the CD to boot on the bare hardware.  My BIOS is the
	latest version, I just upgraded it so I could support the 80GB
	drives I'm using.  

3. Source Code?

	There seems to be a severe lack of source code available.  I
	haven't found anywhere that has a set of patches to a recent
	kernel that will give you all the kernel functionality you need
	to read the disklabel and mount the MFS partitions.

4. Very sparse MFS tools CD.

	Ok, I copied the kernel and initrd from mfstools2.iso and booted
	those straight off the hard drive.  For a CD with a 15M initrd,
	it's severely lacking in common tools.  man pages would be a
	great start.  Real tools instead of busybox for everything.
	Also some network drivers would have been nice.  They have
	support for nfs mounts, but nothing to set up a network
	connection.

So as of now, I have dd'd my TiVo A drive to another drive so I can
start poking around.

Nate