D Landy wrote:> Hi!
>
> I'm trying to upgrade the hard drive in my PVR, without losing all my
> existing recordings.
>
> The trouble is, the data partition on the drive is in Ext2 format, but with
> 32k blocks -- so it can't be mounted in Linux, and the standard
partition
> resizing tools won't touch it (they say it has an invalid superblock).
Where did it come from? What kind of PVR was this? Anything
linux-based will be restricted to at max page-sized blocks, so if it is
32k blocks you can't mount it on an x86.
> I've managed to copy the entire old drive (80gb) to a
correctly-formatted
> new drive (160gb) using dd, and then restored the partition table correctly
> (again with dd). The disk works fine, but it looks like an 80gb drive to
the
> PVR as the superblock etc are still set for 80gb.
>
> Can anyone think of a workaround for this problem? Are there any partition
> resizing tools that will touch 32k-block partitions? Has anyone seen a tool
> that will fix up the superblock and sector allocation tables? Could anyone
> write one?
Don't confuse a partition resizer w/ a filesystem resizer, they are 2
different steps.
You can use your favorite partition resizer (parted, fdisk) w/o trouble,
I'd think; it won't care what the data within the partition is. So just
move the end of your partition out to 160G.
At that point I'd think you could do an offline resize; you can't do it
online because a 4k-page linux box won't mount a 32k-block ext*
filesystem, but the offline variant *should* be able to I'd think.
BUT - if this is a TiVO, I'd go look for the various utilities & howtos
which have been published about how to do this, and not try to roll your
own procedure.
-Eric
> Any help would be much appreciated.
>
> David
>
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