On Thu, Jun 01, 2006 at 05:51:03PM +0200, Carl-Daniel Hailfinger wrote:
Works perfectly for me and my configuration is even more complicated: - GRUB on hda - /boot on hdb5 - / on LVM on hdb - mount-by-label for all filesystems - I can move hdb around as I want (hdc, hdd etc.) and only have to change one line in GRUB, no aother changes necessary.
Is there a reason that /boot is on a seperate partition? I do not know LVM, so I can only guess that the reason is that LVM is not directly bootable. As we had a LONG discussion where it was decided to have /home on a seperate discussion, this would lead to the following solution if we should decide to go with LVM 1 reiser partition /boot to make it bootable 1 LVM partition / 1 LVM partition /home To explain: the seperate /home is not so much about size as it is about keeping your data and settings with a new installation. If there is no real reason to have a seperate /boot, then it would still make sence to have a seperate / and /home as we have now. -- houghi http://houghi.org http://www.plainfaqs.org/linux/ http://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html
Today I went outside. My pupils have never been tinier...
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