Alex Schuster wrote:
Dale writes:

Hmmm, I use resierfs for my file systems, most of them anyway.  I still
use e2fsprogs to change those?
No, but you can use reiserfstune -l.

Is there a way to boot a Gentoo/Knoppix CD and make it use the PATA
drivers?  That way I can boot it and see exactly how it will name them
and what drive is what without actually changing anything at all.  Is
there a boot option "noide" or some other switch I can use?
Don't know. But even if so the result is not cecessarily accurate.

My two SATA drives were sd[ab], but when I added two PATA drives those got
these names, and the SATA ones became sa[cd]. But even this changes, with
a kernel derived from GRML, the PATA ones were sd[bc], and the SATA ones
sd[ad]. Weird, huh? And things become even mor eunpredictable when I have
USB drives plugged in during boot. So I also suggest using labels or
UUIDs.

My own method is yet another one. As I have everything on LVM (except for
the /boot partitino, which is on an USB stick), my drives are identified
by their volume group. /dev/weird is the system drive, /dev/weird2 is the
identical backup drive. This way I do not have any /dev/sdX in either
fstab or grub.conf. And when the system drive fails, I vgrename wird2 to
weird, and then the backup drive will become the system drive.

        Wonko


It would be nice if something like *fdisk could edit the labels tho. It would be so much easier. I didn't see anything in the man pages tho.

I looked into LVM a good while ago. It's just to much for me to keep up with since I just have a desktop system here. It has its good points but just way overkill for what I have here.

It seems as time goes on, things get more complicated.  lol

Dale

:-)  :-)

Reply via email to