On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 10:36 AM, Rod Smith <rodsm...@rodsbooks.com> wrote: > On 07/16/2015 12:01 PM, bug-parted-requ...@gnu.org wrote: > >> I have bought 2x2TB disks and set it up for RAID0. I have installed >> Win7 first with UEFI that created GPT partitions. > ... >> root@lubuntu:~# gdisk >> GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 0.8.8 >> >> Type device filename, or press <Enter> to exit: /dev/sda > ... >> Command (? for help): p >> Disk /dev/sda: 3907029168 sectors, 1.8 TiB >> Logical sector size: 512 bytes >> Disk identifier (GUID): BFD8B9FE-8BF3-4AF3-B04C-326FC7FB5569 >> Partition table holds up to 128 entries >> First usable sector is 34, last usable sector is 7812499934 >> Partitions will be aligned on 2048-sector boundaries >> Total free space is 6890901949 sectors (3.2 TiB) > > I've quoted some information that highlights issues that point to the > root cause of your problem: > > * You've got 2x2TB in a RAID setup, so you should be seeing a > disk device on the order of 4TB (~3.6TiB) > * gdisk says that the disk is 1.8TiB in size -- about the size > of ONE of your two disks, NOT a RAID configuration. > * The partition table indicates that the last usable sector on > the disk is 7,812,499,934, which works out to about 3.6TiB -- > so the original GPT was laid out with RAID active. > > Overall, it looks like you're not using RAID from Linux. If this is > motherboard-based software RAID (aka "fake RAID"), you should NOT be > directly accessing /dev/sda, /dev/sdb, etc.; you should be using devices > in /dev/mapper, whose names vary depending on your chipset. Also, > sometimes Linux and Windows get out of sync on these drivers, so that > one OS activates the driver and the other doesn't. If you don't see > devices in /dev/mapper, you'll need to look into activating RAID in > Ubuntu. See the Ubuntu Community Wiki for advice on this topic: > > https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/SoftwareRAID > > All that said, if a more up-to-date version of parted produces the > errors you report, that still constitutes a bug. As Brian Lane said, > though, your parted is a bit behind the times. This often happens when > you use a distribution-provided package, particularly for a long-term > support distribution like an Ubuntu LTS or a CentOS (vs. a non-LTS > Ubuntu or Fedora).
Note that the most up to date Firmware-RAID ("fake-RAID" is a misnomer) support is provided by mdadm for Intel platforms, not dmraid.