Difference between revisions of "Recovering from Recovery CDs"

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(Possible Causes of Failure During Recovery)
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software installs, reduce the swap size and disable hibernation, but
 
software installs, reduce the swap size and disable hibernation, but
 
you have to time this carefully.
 
you have to time this carefully.
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{{WARN|On my Z61m, RnR3 wiped the WHOLE disk when booted from CD and told to install from the IBM-discs}}
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{{WARN|On my T43, the R&R process overwrites the partition table (although not the partitions after the initial 8GB). If you want your linux installation to survive "restore to factory state" from R&R (partition or optical media), write down the partition table on a piece of paper, boot off a live CD, shrink the (restored) ntfs partition and restore the original partition table, once the restoration procedure is complete.}}
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===Possible Causes of Failure During Recovery===
 
===Possible Causes of Failure During Recovery===
 
The Recovery CDs (shipped from IBM) are a set of up to 8 CDs, one of which is bootable and takes you into an interface almost identical to the [[predesktop area]]. It is possible that when you click "Restore From Factory Contents" (which will actually restore from the other seven CDs), before it begins writing to the hard drive, it may give you an error message that says something like "Restore failed to initialize" and refuse to go further. In my case, completely wiping the hard drive (by booting from a Linux LiveCD and using gnu scrub) fixed the problem. The Restore was able to begin without further problems. Pre-restore, my preboot partition and the whole partition table were likey messed up, which may have been what caused the error.
 
The Recovery CDs (shipped from IBM) are a set of up to 8 CDs, one of which is bootable and takes you into an interface almost identical to the [[predesktop area]]. It is possible that when you click "Restore From Factory Contents" (which will actually restore from the other seven CDs), before it begins writing to the hard drive, it may give you an error message that says something like "Restore failed to initialize" and refuse to go further. In my case, completely wiping the hard drive (by booting from a Linux LiveCD and using gnu scrub) fixed the problem. The Restore was able to begin without further problems. Pre-restore, my preboot partition and the whole partition table were likey messed up, which may have been what caused the error.
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A common problem during recovery *using CD's* is that if the recovery has been started by pressing f12 and choosing the "Boot from CD" the recovery starts fine and it will until the 2nd restart of the machine at which point it hangs / gives error messages of missing files or "unable to initialise" and following recovery attempts will fail with the "unable to initialize" error.
 
A common problem during recovery *using CD's* is that if the recovery has been started by pressing f12 and choosing the "Boot from CD" the recovery starts fine and it will until the 2nd restart of the machine at which point it hangs / gives error messages of missing files or "unable to initialise" and following recovery attempts will fail with the "unable to initialize" error.
  
What happens is that pressing the F12 causes the Boot record to become corrupt, the recovery should -ALLWAYS- be started by changing the boot order in the "startup sequence" of the bios leaving the CDD as the top boot device will ensure a correct recovery.
+
What happens is that pressing the F12 causes the Boot record to become corrupt, the recovery should -ALWAYS- be started by changing the boot order in the "startup sequence" of the bios leaving the CDD as the top boot device will ensure a correct recovery.
 
failing to do this and thus having a corrupt boot record requires the MBR (Master boot record) to be deleted before running a recovery will work.
 
failing to do this and thus having a corrupt boot record requires the MBR (Master boot record) to be deleted before running a recovery will work.
 +
 +
{{WARN|On my T60 the recovery CDs did not start at all, just a blank screen and no further activity. My guess is that the CDs did not like my partitioning (64MB boot, 2GB swap, 4GB slash, rest extended) but also wasn't able to deal with it or to give any indication of the problem. After booting from a live CD and deleting those partitions manually, the recovery CDs booted as well.}}
 +
 +
'''Note for customized recovery''': You should keep in mind that the customized recovery with R&R is not available when recovering from recovery CDs/DVDs. Customized recovery is only available when recovering from harddisk. If you need a customized recovery and you do not have a working R&R recovery partition on your harddrive you have to do a complete recovery from the CDs/DVDs and then a R&R recovery from the harddrive.
  
 
[http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?sitestyle=lenovo&lndocid=MIGR-4VFUDU IBMs Official recovery instructions]
 
[http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?sitestyle=lenovo&lndocid=MIGR-4VFUDU IBMs Official recovery instructions]
  
 
[http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?lndocid=TVAN-SDD&sitestyle=lenovo Deletion Tool to remove a corrupt MBR]
 
[http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?lndocid=TVAN-SDD&sitestyle=lenovo Deletion Tool to remove a corrupt MBR]

Latest revision as of 13:50, 27 July 2008

Information about the recovery process using IBM provided recovery CDs.

Coverage of this approach

If you install from a Recovery CD, you should get all your drivers and pre-installed software back.

Things to be aware of

Obtaining Recovery CDs

If you have your PreDesktop Area intact, you can make a set of Recovery CDs. Otherwise, you have to try to obtain them from IBM.

How does the recovery process deal with existing partition layouts?

Recovery deletes the first partition and then installs to the first block of contiguous free space (which could be bigger than the original first partition if there was free space after it). Later partitions are safe. The partition must be at least 8GB or so or else the recovery will either fail or produce a corrupt Windows installation. You can save a little space if you intervene during some of the IBM software installs, reduce the swap size and disable hibernation, but you have to time this carefully.

ATTENTION!
On my Z61m, RnR3 wiped the WHOLE disk when booted from CD and told to install from the IBM-discs
ATTENTION!
On my T43, the R&R process overwrites the partition table (although not the partitions after the initial 8GB). If you want your linux installation to survive "restore to factory state" from R&R (partition or optical media), write down the partition table on a piece of paper, boot off a live CD, shrink the (restored) ntfs partition and restore the original partition table, once the restoration procedure is complete.

Possible Causes of Failure During Recovery

The Recovery CDs (shipped from IBM) are a set of up to 8 CDs, one of which is bootable and takes you into an interface almost identical to the predesktop area. It is possible that when you click "Restore From Factory Contents" (which will actually restore from the other seven CDs), before it begins writing to the hard drive, it may give you an error message that says something like "Restore failed to initialize" and refuse to go further. In my case, completely wiping the hard drive (by booting from a Linux LiveCD and using gnu scrub) fixed the problem. The Restore was able to begin without further problems. Pre-restore, my preboot partition and the whole partition table were likey messed up, which may have been what caused the error.

A common problem during recovery *using CD's* is that if the recovery has been started by pressing f12 and choosing the "Boot from CD" the recovery starts fine and it will until the 2nd restart of the machine at which point it hangs / gives error messages of missing files or "unable to initialise" and following recovery attempts will fail with the "unable to initialize" error.

What happens is that pressing the F12 causes the Boot record to become corrupt, the recovery should -ALWAYS- be started by changing the boot order in the "startup sequence" of the bios leaving the CDD as the top boot device will ensure a correct recovery. failing to do this and thus having a corrupt boot record requires the MBR (Master boot record) to be deleted before running a recovery will work.

ATTENTION!
On my T60 the recovery CDs did not start at all, just a blank screen and no further activity. My guess is that the CDs did not like my partitioning (64MB boot, 2GB swap, 4GB slash, rest extended) but also wasn't able to deal with it or to give any indication of the problem. After booting from a live CD and deleting those partitions manually, the recovery CDs booted as well.

Note for customized recovery: You should keep in mind that the customized recovery with R&R is not available when recovering from recovery CDs/DVDs. Customized recovery is only available when recovering from harddisk. If you need a customized recovery and you do not have a working R&R recovery partition on your harddrive you have to do a complete recovery from the CDs/DVDs and then a R&R recovery from the harddrive.

IBMs Official recovery instructions

Deletion Tool to remove a corrupt MBR