Debian squeeze install on raid 1




















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Couple questions, just to make sure I understood you right. Ups, here comes the rest: First I install Debian. When it comes to the part where I have to partition my drives, I set two partitions for 2 of my 4 drives. So two drives will have 2 partitions, each with 1GB and 1,TB partitions. The other 2 drives will just have one partition with RAID10 over it. Did I get it right? You need to do the LVM setup during the install. It is fairly obvious how to do this in the standard Debian installer.

Post by drl » Post by smallchange » Privacy Terms. Debian User Forums Skip to content. Quick links. I installed on a test server a Debian 6. At the end, I simulated an hardware failure. Detaching sdb, system reboot in degraded mode, all OK. Detaching sda, system not start. It enters in an infinite loop, after BIOS info black screen and machine restarts.

Not a good way What are the steps required to save the changes on a live system? Tutorial is not only extremely badly written, even worse: it suggests making destructive changes to the system boot process. For example, keeping your config a closer to real life scenario : sda fails, you must reboot the system for any reason but you are not able to change sdb to sda connection and get a new replacement disk so you need to reboot with a faulty sda and a working sdb in a degradated md0.

Great tutorial. I got RAID working in a couple of days. What held me up was the outdated modulees. I loaded mdraid1x instead of raid and mdraid and it all just worked! This feature is only available to subscribers. Get your subscription here. Log in or Sign up. Suggested articles. Here are a couple of bumps you might run into, if you're trying to use this on Debian Unstable "Wheezy". You'll have to use gdisk or parted instead, which is its direct successor and fairly simple to use.

Note however, that there's no direct way of duplicating the partition table from one disk to another.



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