It was also actually pretty fun!

    • cm0002@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 months ago

      I had a server I rented from a provider in a data center and I wanted to image (dd) the drive for archival before I decommissioned it from my infrastructure.

      Normally, you can’t really do that with the OS running and you would have to shut down and insert a live USB or something and temporarily boot from that. The server being a faraway rental the only option was to open a ticket so that they could enable an out-of-band management option like KVM or IPMI. Which would allow you to control a machine as if you had a physical monitor, keyboard and mouse in front of you. With that you can attach flash drives, shutdown, restart, see the POST/BIOS/UEFI screens etc remotely .

      But, I didn’t want to wait 6-8 hours for them to enable that so instead I put together a process that would “boot” me into another distro “installed” into a RAM disk (kinda like how live CD/USB works) from the currently installed and running OS without rebooting

      From there I could unmount the boot disk and do what ever I wanted from there, I could have even wiped the disk entirely and installed a entirely different distro if I wanted

      • AVincentInSpace
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        4 months ago

        How do you do that? What minimal distro did you use? Did you make it yourself? How reliable is pivot-root? How many tries did it take you to do that successfully?

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      RAM is still memory, so you can put anything in there, like an OS.

      With pivot_root, you can change where the root is. So you pivot into your OS in RAM, which becomes the root of the system.

      At that point, you can do pretty much anything you would normally do with your OS, like unmount a HDD.

      I’ve never personally done it, but that’s a simplified explanation of what OP did.