shn2006
05-08-2006, 09:48 AM
I zippered my DTivo DSR7000 about month and half ago successfully. Everything was fine and then I started having some issues that I brought up in this post (http://www.tivocommunity.com/tivo-vb/showthread.php?p=3995146&&#post3995146)
Saturday, when I was watching NBA playoffs, during instant replay, it picked up recording of one of the children's cartoon and got stuck on that - it stayed non-responsive for a while so I had to power it down, Upon powering up it went in reboot loop for 3 times before coming up with green screen of death. I finally discovered what the horrid GSOD looks like : )
I took out the HD as I suspected the bad sectors from my last post. dropped in the original to get tivo back and it's working fine.
However, now I suspect that file system or links on dev/hda9 have become corrupt so I wanted to run e2fsck on that. There is no way it will let me run it meaning fully while booted in Tivo so I tried running that before rezippering my HD.
None of the PTV or MFSTools boots CD have this utility so I got knoppix and tried to run it from there with no luck.couldn't mount dev/hda couldn't do anything on the dev/hda9 ( I connected it to hda - took out my PC's HD to leave it alone)
Anyway, then I tried zippering it from knoppix root shell. Zipper script started and then complained about "/dev/hda7 is not a valid block device" and suggested that image was somehow corrupt or so.
I tried rebooting with PTV's LBA48 aware CD (I have only 80GB HD though) and tried running zipper and it just sailed along to successful message without a hickup.
now I'm ready to drop zippered drive back to run the tweak.sh however, since I still suspect hda9 to be corrupt, I want to run e2fsck or any other such utility that will do the filesystem repair. How do I do this?
Also, why one linux boot would complain about dev/hda not being ext2 FS and dev/hdaX not being a valid block device while the minimal linux boot from PTV just takes it fine?
This probably is more linux centric question but I really don't know any other place to go and ask this question... am scared to death in posting something on DDD :confused:
Thank you for your help,
ShN
Saturday, when I was watching NBA playoffs, during instant replay, it picked up recording of one of the children's cartoon and got stuck on that - it stayed non-responsive for a while so I had to power it down, Upon powering up it went in reboot loop for 3 times before coming up with green screen of death. I finally discovered what the horrid GSOD looks like : )
I took out the HD as I suspected the bad sectors from my last post. dropped in the original to get tivo back and it's working fine.
However, now I suspect that file system or links on dev/hda9 have become corrupt so I wanted to run e2fsck on that. There is no way it will let me run it meaning fully while booted in Tivo so I tried running that before rezippering my HD.
None of the PTV or MFSTools boots CD have this utility so I got knoppix and tried to run it from there with no luck.couldn't mount dev/hda couldn't do anything on the dev/hda9 ( I connected it to hda - took out my PC's HD to leave it alone)
Anyway, then I tried zippering it from knoppix root shell. Zipper script started and then complained about "/dev/hda7 is not a valid block device" and suggested that image was somehow corrupt or so.
I tried rebooting with PTV's LBA48 aware CD (I have only 80GB HD though) and tried running zipper and it just sailed along to successful message without a hickup.
now I'm ready to drop zippered drive back to run the tweak.sh however, since I still suspect hda9 to be corrupt, I want to run e2fsck or any other such utility that will do the filesystem repair. How do I do this?
Also, why one linux boot would complain about dev/hda not being ext2 FS and dev/hdaX not being a valid block device while the minimal linux boot from PTV just takes it fine?
This probably is more linux centric question but I really don't know any other place to go and ask this question... am scared to death in posting something on DDD :confused:
Thank you for your help,
ShN