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Re: [LUG] Transplanting hard drives

 

Thanks for putting me straight.  Am feeling slightly humbled, but reinstaling as we 
speak.  By way of defenceI would like to say that I have spent days trying to 
install the Planet CCRMA kernal when a better 2nd hand box came into my possession.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil Williams" <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: list@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [LUG] Transplanting hard drives
Date: Mon, 24 Jan 2005 10:15:07 +0000


On Monday 24 January 2005 9:28 am, aaron Moore wrote:
Hi
Can anyone help.

Not this box, no. The potential effort required in fixing after this ill
advised shortcut is more than the time required to re-install and let the
hardware be detected properly.

Even if you solve the network connection, there's nothing to say other
components are not broken or mis-configured.

After removing my Fedora hard drive and fixing it to a newer computer I am
unable to connect to the network.

If you put a diesel engine in a car with petrol in the tank, will it work?

The newer computer will have a different network card and sundry other
differences. Why are you doing it this way rather than installing on the new
hardware?

This is a newer machine so it's going to have a decent CD drive (or DVD) and
on-board network support? It's easier to install fresh than to use an install
that was configured for older hardware!

Do the install and copy your user data across later.

Would you expect Windows to cope in the same way? Of course not, if the
hardware is too dissimilar, no OS could cope with being transplanted like
this.

The two machines would have to be all but identical to just swap the drive
over. You'll have to either do the hardware detection by hand or install
properly.

You've tried a shortcut - the only surprise is that only the network card is
showing problems.

When you install an operating system, you don't just 'copy' files, you expect
and require a high level of customisation and configuration to match the
software to that specific piece of hardware. Otherwise there'd be little
point upgrading other than just getting more memory and disc space!

All that configuration needs to be undone and then re-configured for the new
machine. That could take ages - especially as you have NO idea what settings
the new hardware will require because you haven't installed it!

Before I made the change the linux box was conected to the 
internet through a windows xp computer via a cross-over
cable with DHCP.

YUK!

Connect to the internet via Fedora - use an external modem (dial-up) or a
router (broadband). Windows internet connection sharing is still broken.

There again, I'm biased.

I have run the windows network wizard to establish a connection 
and run the linux network wizard many times, but with no success

I'm not surprised, it's a different computer!

I know I am omitting some vital elemant

Yes, installation. All that hardware detection that happens during the
installation of the system is not done to print lots of junk on the screen,
it is vital to the operation of the system.

--

Neil Williams
=============
http://www.dcglug.org.uk/
http://www.nosoftwarepatents.com/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/isbnsearch/
http://www.williamsleesmill.me.uk/
http://www.biglumber.com/x/web?qs=0x8801094A28BCB3E3
<< 2.dat >>

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