Dwayne,
> 1) What are the advantages of moving this box to
> the current version of Debian? I assume security
> updates are a good enough reason but any other
> benefits?
The benefits are countless. Hard to know where to begin!
> 2) I'm going to want to back up the original hard
> drive before I mess with it. I've gone through
> several Disk Imaging programs over the past 30
> plus years but I'm currently using Acronis True
> Image Backup. Under Windows, of course.
>
> Given that I've never messed with a Linux box
> previously, can I simply add the drive from the
> Canvio to one of my Windows boxes and use Acronis
> to get a good backup? The end goal is to be able
> to restore the Canvio to original if necessary.
That's a very good tool. Acronis will image the disk with Ext2/Ext3 partition exactly (older Acronis version cannot deal with Ext4). I had used this tool before a few years ago to backup and restore my Linux rootfs drives (there are many occasions that I need to use Win7, and I still use Acronis to backup my Win7 media player box). You can find out what files system on your Canvio when you log in to the stock OS, I'd bet it is Ext2 or Ext3.
> Once I have a good backup of the Canvio drive, I
> want to start playing. I'm at
>
https://forum.doozan.com/read.php?2,12096 and see
> that the procedure presupposes that I am already
> running Linux somewhere. I'm not.
>
> Before I fire up a virtual machine with some
> flavor of Linux - can I use the Canvio itself to
> do the prep work?
Yes. Log in to Canvio stock OS.
> It's already running some
> version of Linux but I currently don't know how to
> get a console shell up and running.
>
Post in the Canvio thread, so Robert can guide you:
https://forum.doozan.com/read.php?2,35095
Usually we just hook up a serial console. The serial module converter is less than 3 USD, but it will take a while to get here if buying from China on eBay. Get it quicker from Amazon, but it will cost 3 times as much.
> I'm going to stop here and wait for comments. If
> you feel this is something that I shouldn't mess
> with, I'll quietly go away. But I'm willing to
> put some effort into this if I have your
> guidance.
Take it slow and ask questions. It is very doable for an experienced Windows guy. But first get a Linux VM (Ubuntu or Mint) running and create the Debian rootfs on USB thumb drive.
-bodhi
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