Stefan Sczekalla-Waldschmidt wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I've googled a lot about how I simply could mirror the boot disk of my
> OpenBSD based routers.
> 
> The intention is not to have the harddisk as a single point of failure.

heh.  you are likely in for a rude surprise.
('course, by definition, RAID means your disk system is a multiple point
of failure)

> I've seen a rather interesting documentation on how to do this using
> raidframe at:
> http://wiki.abstrakt.ch/bin/view/HOWTOs/OpenBsdSoftwareRAID 
> 
> The above procedure which needs to be partially reexecuted on every new
> router we'll have to setup makes me looking for a more easy way for less
> skilled people ( I'm not the one who will be in question for the setups
> ).
> 
> As of starting 3.7 there is also "ccd" but after reading the manpages
> I'm still confused on can I use ccd to "mirror" my boot/root disk. 

didn't check the archives?
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&w=2&r=1&s=ccd&q=b

There are a few long, rambling posts by me in there.  Read 'em.  Lot of
other people had some good wisdom there, too.  And a few turkeys.  You
get to decide which are which.  (hint: I'm probably a turkey. :)

> Would a hardware el-cheapo raid-controller be of any help in a way that
> the joe-user standard setup procedure will work ?

General answer: no.
I'm suspicious that if teamed up with ccd, it might be possible to do
some nifty stuff with a software-based (i.e., el-cheapo) (pseudo-)RAID
card.  HOWEVER, until I actually verify that, you are on your own.  And
no, it isn't brainless and turnkey.  Hint: standard IDE interfaces and
BIOS won't boot if the PRIMARY drive is dead...

Nick.

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