Carlos E. R. wrote:
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The Friday 2007-06-22 at 07:46 -0400, Richard Creighton wrote:
The ultimate goal should be to have the best raid 5 possible with the hardware you have ;-p
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...I did. In fact, in order to get the 5th drive to run my tests, I had to cannibalize an older RedHat system that is 'wounded' because I lost a cpu fan and damaged the cpu chip. I was going to replace the MB in that system at some point but now, I may also be short a drive having had to use it in what I thought was ample hardware; A new ASUS system MB with 4 SATA drives and with a so-called hardware raid controller built-in to the MB. As it turns out, that controller is a 'fake-raid' which borrows cpu cycles but still, with the hardware I had, under Windoze, the configuration would have worked (demonstrated), but I refuse to contaminate my system with that OS and I believe anything Windoze can do, Linux can (or should) be able to do better.
Thus, use software raid in linux, which also works out of the box. No need to use the fake-raid drivers, and has probably the same speed, and decidly better support and compatibility.
I don't see any advantage in using the fake raid method, except using windows - and you aren't, so why go the difficult road?
With software raid you do not need an extra drive, just a plain /boot partition replicated on all disks. I'm almost sure it is documented somewhere.
I'm planning on experimenting with that. I recently bought an IBM Netfinity X232 server, with 4 18G SCSI disks. I've currently got SUSE 10.2 running on it, but without RAID. -- Use OpenOffice.org http://www.openoffice.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org